in reply to Re: Tengwar
in thread Tengwar

I have "Marillion" on my web site in Quenya using the tengwar. I learned to write it a couple years ago during the forming of my LOTR craze.

Marillion means "son of pearl".

_____________________________________________________
Jeff[japhy]Pinyan: Perl, regex, and perl hacker, who'd like a job (NYC-area)
s++=END;++y(;-P)}y js++=;shajsj<++y(p-q)}?print:??;

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Re: Re: Re: Tengwar
by halley (Prior) on May 05, 2004 at 19:20 UTC

    Just a nit, but you don't "write in Tengwar." The word 'tengwar' roughly equates to the table of letters. That would be like saying you "write in Alphabet."

    You might say you write using the Feanorian characters, or if you're a true elf-nut, you might write in the Sindarin language (or some other dialect).

    It's nice to see that the Unicode has a code point for the Tengwar. I don't think it's really complete as Tolkien used quite a few characters not described in LotR appendices, but it's flattering to the fans that it was considered.

    --
    [ e d @ h a l l e y . c c ]

      It's nice to see that the Unicode has a code point for the Tengwar. I don't think it's really complete as Tolkien used quite a few characters not described in LotR appendices, but it's flattering to the fans that it was considered.
      hmmm, the Proposed New Scripts page states it as [...]being worked on by Unicode Technical Committee Working Groups.

      The proposition dates back to 1997...I wonder if propositions are ever rejected, or if their status remains "being worked on" for ever; tengwar as part of unicode with available fonts would be really helpful in writing/reading online about LOTR...

      regards,
      tomte


      An intellectual is someone whose mind watches itself.
      -- Albert Camus