-
creation process. He
successively changed the language's name from
Elfin and
Qenya to the
eventual Quenya.
Finnish had been a
major source of inspiration,...
-
mechanisms of
sound change in the
following daughter languages:
Qenya,
Lindarin (a
dialect of
Qenya), Telerin, Old
Noldorin (or Fëanorian),
Noldorin (or Gondolinian)...
- Welden, and Hostetter,
Parma Eldalamberon 16 2006 "
Qenya Declensions", "
Qenya Conjugations", "
Qenya Word-lists", ed. Gilson, Hostetter, Wynne,
Parma Eldalamberon...
- (2015-06-12). "The
Feanorian Alphabet (Part 1) and
Quenya Verb Structure:
Qenya Grammar –
Spelling and Transcription".
Parma Eldalamberon (22): 66. ⟨q⟩...
-
Tolkien created for his mythos,
starting with what he
originally called "
Qenya", the
first primitive form of Elvish. This was
later called Quenya (High-elven)...
-
during its development, but only one has been
published in full: The
Early Qenya Grammar.
Apart from that, he
wrote several diachronic studies of Quenya...
- he was at the King Edward's School, Birmingham.
Around 1915, he
named it
Qenya,
before changing the
spelling to Quenya.
Tolkien wrote that "my 'own language'...
- 2008.
Retrieved July 31, 2008. Tolkien, J. R. R. (1998). "Qenyaqetsa: The
Qenya Phonology and Lexicon".
Parma Eldalamberon (12). East Lansing, Michigan:...
-
their own right.
Tolkien developed a list of
names and
meanings called the
Qenya Lexicon.
Christopher Tolkien included extracts from this in an appendix...
- Eldar, Lindarin, Noldorin, and Telerin. What
Tolkien called 'Elf-Latin',
Qenya, the
classical and
ancient language of the Eldar,
derived from Lindarin...