- Cities and buildings
- Fields, plains and deserts
- Forests
- Hills and mountains
- Islands and promontories
- Lands, realms and regions
- Rivers and lakes
- Seas and oceans
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Dates
Devised as part of the Tengwar during the Years of the Trees
Origins
Probably invented by Fëanor1
Race
Division
Originated with the Noldor
Pronunciation
te'marr ('rr' emphasises that the final r sound should be pronounced)
Meaning
'Series' (in this context, though téma can also mean a line or row)
Note
témar is a plural term; a single series of this kind was known as a téma
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TémarThe series of Fëanorian writingA term describing the arrangement of characters of the Elvish script known as Fëanorian Tengwar. These characters in this script were not assigned to sounds arbitrarily, but rather the structure of each letter defined the nature of the sound to which it related. To achieve this, the twenty-four primary letters of the alphabet were subdivided into four témar or 'series', each of which consisted of a series of variations on a basic sound. Each of the primary Tengwar was written with at least two elements: a straight stem (telco) and a curved bow (lúva). For any given téma, the telco would always be on the same side of the letter (either on right, with the lúva curving downard, or on the left, with the lúva curving upward). The curve of the lúva could be either open or closed with a single horizontal line. Within any given téma, all the letters would share their orientation, and all would have their lúva either open or closed. Within that basic structure, the telco could be lengthened upward or downward, and the lúva could be doubled, with each of these changes signifying a certain change to the sound of represented by the letter. Each téma took its name from its basic sound, for which the character always had a long telco running downward and a single lúva. The letter representing the t sound, for example, was named tinco, and so the entire series of related sounds was known as the tincotéma. Other examples included the parmatéma (from parma, the letter for p), the calmatéma (from calma, the sound of k) or the quessetéma (from quessë, the sound kw). Within the téma, each modification of the sound was represented by a standardised change to the form of the character (these different grades of sound were known as tyeller). So, for example, in tincotéma, adding a second bowed lúva extending from the first would add 'voice' to the basic unvoiced sound, so making t into d. Moving the telco upward would indicate a spirant sound, so t would become th. These sound changes within a single téma are shown in more detail in the table below. This table uses the tincotéma as an example, but similar effects applied to each of the different témar, altering the sounds of the letters in the same ways as shown here for t.
Notes
See also...For acknowledgements and references, see the Disclaimer & Bibliography page. Original content © copyright Mark Fisher 1998, 2001, 2012, 2015, 2023. All rights reserved. For conditions of reuse, see the Site FAQ. Website services kindly sponsored by Discus from Axiom Software Ltd.Discus can now create DISC questionnaires in no less than 35 different languages. |