Elen: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Peter Xavier Price - The Firstborn at Lake Cuivienen.jpg|250px|thumb|"The Firstborn at Lake Cuivienen" by [[Peter Xavier Price]]]]
[[File:Peter Xavier Price - The Firstborn at Lake Cuivienen.jpg|250px|thumb|''The Firstborn at Lake Cuivienen'' by [[Peter Xavier Price]]]]
'''''elen''''' (pl. '''eleni''' or '''eldi''') means "star" in [[Quenya]].<ref>{{S|Appendix}}, ''elen''</ref>
'''''elen''''' (pl. '''eleni''' or '''eldi''') means "star" in [[Quenya]].<ref>{{S|Appendix}}, ''elen''</ref>



Revision as of 15:03, 24 June 2020

The Firstborn at Lake Cuivienen by Peter Xavier Price

elen (pl. eleni or eldi) means "star" in Quenya.[1]

The Edain, however, equated elen and elda ("Elf"), so in some situations elen translates as "Elf".

Etymology

PQ Root EL.[2]

It is said traditionally to come from the exclamation ele! ("behold"), being the first word the first Elves spoke at Cuiviénen, when they saw the stars.[3]

Other forms

  • elenna = "to a star": allative, also a name for Númenor.[4]
  • elelli = "stars": partitive plural[5]
  • elenion = "of stars": pl. genitive[6]
  • elenillor = "from stars": pl. ablative[7]

Seen in

With the meaning "Elf"

  • Elendil = "Friend of the Elves"
  • Elessar = "Elf-stone"
  • Elesser = Variant of Elendil

Examples

Inspiration

El means "deity" in some Semitic languages, and is a common element in many Hebrew names, as happens with Elvish names. Dante Alighieri in his De vulgari eloquentia suggests that the word El was the first sound emitted by Adam: While the first utterance of humans after birth is a cry of pain, Dante assumed that Adam could only have made an exclamation of joy, which at the same time was addressing his Creator.[10] Verlyn Flieger explains that "neither Tolkien's ele nor its derivative el, functions in his protolanguage as a name of God. Nevertheless, both are names for the first light, which suggests God's emanation. The similarity of the fictive first utterance of Tolkien's Elves to Dante's deduced first utterance should not go unremarked".[11]

References