Quote:
Originally Posted by Kuruharan
A very simple question (well, two questions...well, two and a related third).
Why is it Gondorians instead of Gondorrim?
Similarly, why is it Numenorians instead of Numenorrim?
I initially thought it was to avoid being pejorative (i.e. Haradrim) but the greatest allies of Gondor were the Rohirrim, so that might not be the case...at least not directly.
Perhaps it was still a bit of cultural pretension of "-rim" not being used to describe directly Edainic peoples (I say "directly" because the Rohirrim were of ultimate Edainic extraction).
A related question would be...Elves did not generally seem to have "national" demonyms for themselves, at least to my recollection. What would an Elf of Nargothrond have called himself, if anything?
|
I would guess that it's just a case of the suffixes -han, -rad, and -dor simply being conjuncted (?) differently.
We do this in English:
Scotland = Scottish
England = English
Ireland = Irish
Japan = Japanese
Portugal = Portuguese
Taiwan = Taiwanese
Russia = Russian
Lithuania = Lithuanian
Bulgaria = Bulgarian
Because it's English, and English is essentially a square peg of French hammered into a round hole of German, it isn't always consistent. But, I think it's the same idea.