Tengwar Scottish Gaelic 2

Tengwar alphabet for Scottish Gaelic   
Gàidhlig (Gaelic) in the Tengwar alphabet

This method of writing Scottish Gaelic was devised by Ian James. He believes one of the challenges
facing a language which is struggling against extinction is making it attractive to learn. On the face
of it, Gaelic is a beautiful language to hear and speak, but frightful to read and spell. Some would
say the quaintness of unusual letter combinations is part of Gaelic’s charm; others would wonder why
Latin letters – the basis of English and Romance languages – have been adhered to at all, given its
accompanying complexity and the lack of apparent relationship to the phonemics of those other
Latin-based scripts.

Tengwar is the script devised by J.R.R. Tolkien for writing an Elvish tongue, as explained in
Appendix E of ‘Lord of the Rings’. Using a popular ‘elvish’ script (with slight modification) for
Gaelic is somewhat appropriate, given the strong connection in traditional lore through the Old
Irish ancestry to the otherworldly Tuatha De Danann. It also resembles slightly the uncial alphabet
of medieval Celtic manuscripts, or an historical sideways development of it.

Adapting this then to the /phonetic/ form of the living language, rather than directly substituting
for the highly evolved (though unusual) use of Latin letters, should make it seem apt and natural.
In addition, this use of a fictitious, lighthearted and beautiful script for the fading Gaelic tongue
may both help to lighten the somewhat gloom-ridden topic of Scottish cultural survival, and encourage
young people and foreigners to explore the language.

Consonants

Almost all of the 4 consonant series (Elvish tema) are used, and fit Tolkien’s original scheme
comfortably. In turn, these series were clearly inspired by the Brahmi-Sanskrit arrangement.

Tengwar for Scottish Gaelic - consonants

Note that the /k/ series has slender forms in the /c/ series, with /n/ also having its
slender form there; and /s/ and /l/ have their own slender forms. Others will use a following
or preceding semivowel /j/ to achieve the palatizing effect, if the slender vowels /e/ and /i/
are not able to by themselves. The singular forms of /tj/ and /dj/ are simply abbreviations
for /t/+/j/ and /d/+/j/. The spelling rule of ‘slender to slender, broad to broad’ no longer
applies, since we are just writing the sounds.

Lenition is the grammatical change of initial consonants; in almost all cases, it involves
a simple swapping of the vertical stem, showing a change to the fricative of the consonant
series. This also shows where fricatives in general have come from:

Tengwar for Scottish Gaelic - Lenition

There is equivalence of sound in the pairs ‘th/sh’ and ‘dh/gh’ and ‘bh/mh’ but their
written forms distinguish the phonological or grammatical derivation of the phoneme.
This goes a little way toward preserving historical roots, where the use of a phonetic
method will generally obscure them. It may be noted that in Old Irish, ‘th’ ‘dh’ ‘bh’ would
have been unvoiced dental fricative, voiced dental fricative and voiced bilabial fricative
respectively, which makes even more sense of the consonant series.

Vowels & other marks

Vowel marks (Elvish tehtar) are written above their preceding consonant, in the Quenya
style of diacritic placement. This system is similar to those used in scripts of the far
eastern branches of the Indo-European language family; Gaelic is the farthest west of this
family. If initial and/or long, vowels sit above a carrier; for diphthongs, a semivowel follows.
Optional forms of some vowels are available, for avoiding top stems, etc.

Tengwar for Scottish Gaelic - vowels and punctuation

NB. There are no silent letters except lenited /f/ and the elison-marker.

Numerals

Numerals are stylistically related to the letters, and were designed in sets of three,
with optional forms for 10, 11 and 12. Elvish numbers were formed with digits going right
to left, as in the Arabic language; but that might prove confusing.

Tengwar for Scottish Gaelic - numerals

Sample texts

Sample text in Tengwar for Scottish Gaelic

Sample texts in Tengwar for Scottish Gaelic

Differences in spelling by Tengwar may occur where dialects differ. There would seem no
reason to discourage this, since it merely preserves the local speech, and would be no less
intelligible than the hearing of them.

  • Categoria dell'articolo:Lingue
  • Tempo di lettura:5 minuti di lettura