Thread: About Eriol -
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Old 03-28-2001, 07:15 AM   #5
cian
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Re: About Eriol -

&quot;Eriol&quot; indeed springs from the early legends (Cf. also Ereol) There's also an early note where the meaning &quot;one who dreams alone&quot; is said to be a pun on Lindo's part. In any case, Christopher Tolkien also reveals a gloss &quot;Ironcliffs&quot; [so written] ... &quot;Gnomish&quot; equivalent Angol, and Qenya (not later Quenya) Eriollo ... for that was the fairies name for the black coasts of Eriols home. Compare Angol to Old English Angel, Angul -- and cf. Angeln of the Danish Peninsula in this early form of the Mythology for England.

Interestingly, the word eriol in Etymologies, meaning &quot;alone, single&quot;, is apparently acceptable in Sindarin as such, according to mega Tolkien linguist David Salo (or at least he offered it as usable in Sindarin poetry)

On the god-word Eru ... root ERE &quot;be alone&quot; and masculine (and sometimes agental) ending -u -&gt; Eru &quot;the One, God&quot;. You can see the related meaning in ref. to the singularity of God.

Cheers~

</p>Edited by: <A HREF=http://www.barrowdowns.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_profile&u=00000317>cian</A> at: 3/29/01 2:25:33 pm
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