Finnish: Difference between revisions

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'''Finnish''' is a Scandinavian language, and one of the few non-Indoeuropean languages spoken in Europe.
'''Finnish''' is a Scandinavian language, and one of the few non-Indoeuropean languages spoken in Europe.


The phonotactics of the Finnish language excited [[J.R.R. Tolkien]] which he likened to "bottles of an amazing wine of a kind and flavour never tasted before" that "quite intoxicated" him.<ref>{{L|214}}</ref>
The phonotactics of the Finnish language excited [[J.R.R. Tolkien]] which he likened to "bottles of an amazing wine of a kind and flavour never tasted before" that "quite intoxicated" him.<ref>{{L|163}}</ref>


It became was the inspiration for the [[Elvish]] language which Tolkien named [[Qenya]] (later [[Quenya]]), a language designed to emulate the beauty evoked by Finnish. Other than in the field of phonotactics, a small part of the Quenya vocabulary was probably directly inspired by Finnish words, cf. Q. ''[[lapse]]'' "baby", perhaps from F. ''[[Wiktionary:lapsi#Finnish|lapsi]]'' "child".
It became was the inspiration for the [[Elvish]] language which Tolkien named [[Qenya]] (later [[Quenya]]), a language designed to emulate the beauty evoked by Finnish. Other than in the field of phonotactics, a small part of the Quenya vocabulary was probably directly inspired by Finnish words, cf. Q. ''[[lapse]]'' "baby", perhaps from F. ''[[Wiktionary:lapsi#Finnish|lapsi]]'' "child".

Revision as of 14:02, 13 December 2015

"...there is much else that may be told." — Glóin
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Finnish is a Scandinavian language, and one of the few non-Indoeuropean languages spoken in Europe.

The phonotactics of the Finnish language excited J.R.R. Tolkien which he likened to "bottles of an amazing wine of a kind and flavour never tasted before" that "quite intoxicated" him.[1]

It became was the inspiration for the Elvish language which Tolkien named Qenya (later Quenya), a language designed to emulate the beauty evoked by Finnish. Other than in the field of phonotactics, a small part of the Quenya vocabulary was probably directly inspired by Finnish words, cf. Q. lapse "baby", perhaps from F. lapsi "child".

References

External links