The Barrow-Downs Discussion Forum

The Barrow-Downs Discussion Forum (http://forum.barrowdowns.com/index.php)
-   The Books (http://forum.barrowdowns.com/forumdisplay.php?f=9)
-   -   thangorodrim= fang-mountain-people??? (http://forum.barrowdowns.com/showthread.php?t=1206)

the guy who be short 03-06-2003 06:54 AM

thangorodrim= fang-mountain-people???
 
hail, fellow tolkienites

sorry, im insane... anyway

my knowledge of sindarin is extremely limited, i am learning quenya, which i much prefer. but what does the name thangorodrim mean?

i know orodrim was a name given to the ents, meaning mountain people. could thang be an early version of thanc in orthanc? fang?

this would make so little sense that it makes me want to cry. [img]smilies/frown.gif[/img] please, does anybody know what it means, im going mad here. wait, im already mad. never mind, just find out what it means, please.

Maerbenn 03-06-2003 07:39 AM

In the Second Phase of the Later Quenta Silmarillion published in HoMe X: Morgoth's Ring Tolkien gives the meaning 'the Mountains of Oppression'.

the guy who be short 03-06-2003 08:29 AM

could you please break up thangorodrim into the mountains of oppression? i know orod is mountain. whats oppresion and of?

Feanor of the Peredhil 03-06-2003 04:05 PM

Didn't Orthanc mean something in two separate languages? Because instead of fang, I'd assume it meant 'tower', as in the towers of oppresion, loosely translated. Also, the it could be 'than' with no g, and the g could come in gor, as in gorgor, which meant terror. As for the 'odrim', maybe it was a little personification, eh, the 'Towers of Terror' personified, but that's asking for a bit too much of a stretch.

Falagar 03-06-2003 05:34 PM

If I remember correctly, Orthanc should mean something like "clever device" in old-english, but I can't remember what it meant in Elvish (it was something similar...). I've taken it from Unfinished Tales, but I can't find the exact quote...

[ March 06, 2003: Message edited by: Falagar ]

Annunfuiniel 03-07-2003 01:56 AM

Thangorodrim: thang='oppression'
orod='mountain'
rim='multitude, crowd', often
a sign of collective plural
(as in this case:mountains)

Burzdol 03-07-2003 01:59 PM

What language does that come from?[elvish, dwarven, etc.]

~Burzdol~

Inderjit Sanghera 03-07-2003 02:04 PM

Sindarin. The language of the Sindar and later on the Noldor, though it wasn't widely spoken in Beleriand until the Dagor Aglareb.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 06:42 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.