Scary: Difference between revisions

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'''Scary''' was a small settlement that lay in the hilly region of caves and rock holes that formed the northern parts of the [[Eastfarthing]], which also gave its name to the surrounding stony hills.  
{{location infobox
| name=Scary
| image=
| caption=
| pronun=
| othernames=
| location=[[Eastfarthing]], [[The Shire]]
| type=Settlement
| description=
| regions=
| towns=
| inhabitants=[[Hobbits]]
| created=
| destroyed=
| events=
}}
'''Scary''' was a small settlement that lay in the hilly region of caves and rock holes that formed the northern parts of the [[Eastfarthing]], which also gave its name to the surrounding [[Hills of Scary|stony hills]].<ref>{{FR|Part}}</ref>


From among the rocky lands around Scary much of [[the Shire]]'s stone was quarried.  
From among the rocky lands around Scary much of [[the Shire]]'s stone was quarried.  


During the [[War of the Ring]], the Scary quarries were used by [[Sharkey's Men]] to store their loot, and after Sharkey was defeated, much of this was recovered by the [[Shire-hobbits]].
During the [[War of the Ring]], the Scary quarries were used by [[Ruffians|Sharkey's Men]] to store their loot, and after Sharkey was defeated, much of this was recovered by the [[Shire-hobbits]].<ref>{{RK|VI9}}</ref>
 
==Etymology==
==Etymology==
[[J.R.R. Tolkien|Tolkien]] notes that the name was meaningless in [[Hobbitish]] of the [[War of the Ring]]. However he notes that since it was in a rocky region and of a stone-quarry, it may be supposed to contain English dialectal ''scar'', "rocky cliff".<ref>{{HM|N}}, p. 775</ref>
[[J.R.R. Tolkien|Tolkien]] notes that the name was meaningless in [[Hobbitish]] of the [[War of the Ring]]. However he notes that since it was in a rocky region and of a stone-quarry, it may be supposed to contain English dialectal ''scar'', "rocky cliff".<ref>{{HM|N}}, p. 775</ref>
Based on the above, [[David Salo]] has suggested that Scary represents a speculative [[Old English]] *''Skerig'' "precipitous (place)". Salo also noted that the form of this dialectal word, specifically the existence of sk-, reveals a [[Norse]] origin.<ref>{{webcite|author=[[David Salo]]|articleurl=http://groups.yahoo.com/group/elfling/message/121|articlename=Hobbitish Place-names|dated=23 November 1998|website=[[Elfling]]|accessed=9 March 2013}}</ref>
[[Tom Shippey]] suggests an etymology from Old English ''scearu'' "a boundary", marking the Shire's northern boundary; the retaining (or reversal) of /sk/ might reflect the peculiarity of [[Wikipedia:Northern English|Northern English]] (in such names as [[Wikipedia:Skipton|Skipton]], [[Wikipedia:Scarborough, North Yorkshire|Scarborough]]).<ref>[[Jason Fisher]], ed., ''[[Tolkien and the Study of His Sources]]'', p. 11</ref>
{{references}}
{{references}}
[[Category:Cities, Towns and Villages of the Shire]]
[[Category:Hills]]
[[Category:Hills]]
[[Category:Cities, towns and villages of the Shire]]
[[de:Schären]]
[[de:Schären]]
[[fi:Kivikko]]
[[fi:Kivikko]]

Revision as of 21:18, 17 June 2020

Scary
Settlement
General Information
LocationEastfarthing, The Shire
TypeSettlement
InhabitantsHobbits
GalleryImages of Scary

Scary was a small settlement that lay in the hilly region of caves and rock holes that formed the northern parts of the Eastfarthing, which also gave its name to the surrounding stony hills.[1]

From among the rocky lands around Scary much of the Shire's stone was quarried.

During the War of the Ring, the Scary quarries were used by Sharkey's Men to store their loot, and after Sharkey was defeated, much of this was recovered by the Shire-hobbits.[2]

Etymology

Tolkien notes that the name was meaningless in Hobbitish of the War of the Ring. However he notes that since it was in a rocky region and of a stone-quarry, it may be supposed to contain English dialectal scar, "rocky cliff".[3]

Based on the above, David Salo has suggested that Scary represents a speculative Old English *Skerig "precipitous (place)". Salo also noted that the form of this dialectal word, specifically the existence of sk-, reveals a Norse origin.[4]

Tom Shippey suggests an etymology from Old English scearu "a boundary", marking the Shire's northern boundary; the retaining (or reversal) of /sk/ might reflect the peculiarity of Northern English (in such names as Skipton, Scarborough).[5]

References