Serni: Difference between revisions

From Tolkien Gateway
Line 8: Line 8:
==Portrayal in adaptations==
==Portrayal in adaptations==
'''2014: ''[[The Lord of the Rings Online]]'':'''
'''2014: ''[[The Lord of the Rings Online]]'':'''
:The river Serni is found in Lower [[Lebennin]] in the region of Central [[Gondor]]. As its name indicates,{{fact}} it is strewn with rocks. There are two fords, with the western one being south of the town of "Malbarth" and the eastern one south of "Ost Anglebed". The Serni is the domain of the stern River-maid Grey-eye, one of the Five Sisters, though she and her sisters were widely considered a myth by the time of the [[War of the Ring]].
:The river Serni was found in Lower [[Lebennin]] in the region of Central [[Gondor]]. As its name indicated,{{fact}} it was strewn with rocks. There were two fords, with the western one being south of the town of "Malbarth" and the eastern one south of "Ost Anglebed". The Serni was the domain of the stern River-maid Grey-eye, one of the Five Sisters, though she and her sisters were widely considered a myth by the time of the [[War of the Ring]].


{{references}}
{{references}}

Revision as of 23:25, 27 August 2015

The Serni was a short river of southern Gondor; it rose beneath the eastern White Mountains, and flowed southwestward through Lebennin until it met the River Gilrain at Linhir.[1]

Etymology

The name Serni is an "adjectival formation" deriving from Sindarin sarn ("small stone, pebble").[2][3] The meaning is therefore "stony".[4]

The name of the river is spelled Serni in the maps of The Lord of the Rings. In the footnote 1 of the Preface of The Adventures of Tom Bombadil it is spelled Sernui.[5]

Portrayal in adaptations

2014: The Lord of the Rings Online:

The river Serni was found in Lower Lebennin in the region of Central Gondor. As its name indicated,[source?] it was strewn with rocks. There were two fords, with the western one being south of the town of "Malbarth" and the eastern one south of "Ost Anglebed". The Serni was the domain of the stern River-maid Grey-eye, one of the Five Sisters, though she and her sisters were widely considered a myth by the time of the War of the Ring.

References