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[[Image:Tengwar Ambar.gif|right|150px]]'''''ambar''''' means "doom" in [[Quenya]]. Compare with ''[[amarth]]'' in [[Sindarin]].
[[Image:Tengwar Ambar.gif|right|150px]]
'''''ambar''''' means "doom" in [[Quenya]].<ref name=PE17>{{PE|17}}, p. 66</ref>
==Etymology==
*[[Sundocarme|Root]] MBART ("doom, fate").<ref name=PE17/><ref name="E">{{LR|Etymologies}}, p. 372</ref>
==Examples==
* [[Ambaráto]], "Champion of Doom"
* [[Túrin|Turambar]], "Master of Doom"
*[[martya]]
*[[Umbar (word)|umbar]]


Examples:
==Cognates==
* [[Ambaráto]] = "Champion of Doom"
*[[Sindarin]], ''[[amarth]]''
* [[Turambar]] = "Master of Doom"


When '''''Ambar''''' is capitalized, it refers to "The World" with the connotation of "habitation" or "home". [[J.R.R. Tolkien|Tolkien]] equated the Elvish term with the Greek term "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oikumene Oikoumene]", which referred to the inhabited world, as oppossed to the barbaric wild. In this sense ''Ambar'' is different than ''[[Arda]]'', which refers to the world as a physical whole.
=Ambar=
[[File:Sage - Arda in the Second Age.png|thumb|The flat World during the [[Second Age]]]]
'''''Ambar''''' also refers to "The World" with the connotation of "habitation" or "home" ("[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oikumene Oikoumene]"<ref>{{HM|L}}, [[Letter 283]]</ref>), which referred to the inhabited world, as opposed to the barbaric wild.  


The [[Elves]] may have equated the concept of "doom" with the inhabited world because their ''[[fëar]]'' were tied eternally with Arda, as opposed to [[Men]], whose souls escape beyond the world upon death (see: the [[Gift of Men]]).
In this sense ''Ambar'' is different than ''[[Arda]]'', which refers to the world as a physical whole.
==Etymology==
[[Sundocarmë|Root]] A-[[MBAR]] "dwelling, habitation"<ref name="E" />
==Cognates==
*[[Sindarin]] ''[[amar]]'' "earth", ''[[bar]]'' "land"
==See also==
*[[már]], "home, dwelling"
* [[Ambar-metta]], "the Ending of the World"
==Notes==
The [[Elves]] may have equated the concept of "doom" with the inhabited world because their ''[[fëar]]'' were tied eternally with Arda, as opposed to [[Men]], whose souls escape beyond the world upon death (see: the [[Gift of Men]]).  


''ambar'' may be a variant of ''[[umbar]]'', which means "fate".
Furthermore, the roots MBAR and MBAR-AT might be ultimately related.


== References ==
__NOTOC__
* ''[[The Languages of Tolkien's Middle-earth]]'' by [[Ruth S. Noel]]
{{references}}
* [http://www.uib.no/People/hnohf/qlist.htm Quenya Corpus Wordlist] edited by [[Helge Kåre Fauskanger]]
{{title|lowercase}}
 
[[Category:Quenya nouns]]
[[Category:Quenya words]]
[[fi:Ambar]]
[[Category:Locations]]

Revision as of 13:12, 17 June 2015

ambar means "doom" in Quenya.[1]

Etymology

Examples

Cognates

Ambar

The flat World during the Second Age

Ambar also refers to "The World" with the connotation of "habitation" or "home" ("Oikoumene"[3]), which referred to the inhabited world, as opposed to the barbaric wild.

In this sense Ambar is different than Arda, which refers to the world as a physical whole.

Etymology

Root A-MBAR "dwelling, habitation"[2]

Cognates

See also

Notes

The Elves may have equated the concept of "doom" with the inhabited world because their fëar were tied eternally with Arda, as opposed to Men, whose souls escape beyond the world upon death (see: the Gift of Men).

Furthermore, the roots MBAR and MBAR-AT might be ultimately related.


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 J.R.R. Tolkien, "Words, Phrases and Passages in Various Tongues in The Lord of the Rings", in Parma Eldalamberon XVII (edited by Christopher Gilson), p. 66
  2. 2.0 2.1 J.R.R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien (ed.), The Lost Road and Other Writings, Part Three: "The Etymologies", p. 372
  3. J.R.R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien, Humphrey Carpenter (ed.), The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, Letter 283