Hobbitish



The term Hobbitish was one given for the sub-dialect of Westron, a tongue spoken by Hobbits of the Shire.

History
The original language of the Hobbits was lost in history, but the earliest Hobbit-language was likely a northern Mannish tongue, which would have been learned from the Éothéod. This is because the earliest known location of the Hobbits was in the upper vales of the Anduin river; a place located in the same area as the Éothéod lived.

Once, a number of Stoors moved briefly to Eriador. While there, they came in contact with the Dunlendings, and picked up a few Dunlendish words. When the Stoors later moved to the Shire, they quickly adopted Hobbitish. Because of their Dunlending background, however, several regional peculiarities came about in regions that the Stoors had settled in such as Buckland and The Marish.

By the time of the War of the Ring, Rohirric and Hobbitish had many similarities which were obvious even to a non-speaker like Meriadoc Brandybuck.

Because of their northern Mannish background from the Vales of Anduin, Hobbitish retained some archaic elements that didn't exist in Westron. Simply hearing parts of the language of the Rohirrim, Merry noticed several words which clearly sounded like old words used in the Shire.

Merry would in his later years author a book of linguistic study on the relationship, "Old Place Names in the Shire."

Grammatical differences
Hobbitish was a regional dialect spoken in a rustic agricultural region. As such, it was not as "refined" as the true form of the language as spoken eg. in Gondor or Rivendell. It contained many simplifications and archaisms.



Familiar pronoun
Hobbit society was made up almost entirely of farmers and with barely any "government" to speak of, much less a noble class. As a result, Hobbitish possesses only the "familiar" pronoun of Westron but not the deferential pronoun; except in scattered parts of the Westfarthing where is was used more as a light-hearted term of endearment.

This prominent peculiarity in actual grammatical structure is what Gondorians are referring to when they repeatedly remark that Hobbit-speech sounds strange.

It was most obvious when Peregrin Took  was speaking to Denethor II, Steward and ruler of Gondor, while he was at court in Minas Tirith; unintentionally, Pippin was addressing Denethor using the very informal and personalized familiar language, as with a close friend or social equal. Denethor seemed to react with some bemusement but this astonished his servants, and probably gave strength to the rumor that Pippin was of very high social rank within his own country, the "Ernil i Pheriannath".

Names
Personal names of Hobbit individuals are varied. Some of them are Hobbitish but many are archaic with forgotten meaning.

Peasants and tradesmen like the Gamgees  or the Hornblowers used short archaic names, akin to that of the Éothéod (cf. Fastred, Erling).

Members of old aristocratic families such as the Tooks and the Bolgers, had names taken mostly from legends of the past. They often had names which referred to weapons, battles and bravery (cf. Isengar, Hildifons).

Bucklanders such as the Brandybucks wore peculiar names apparently derived from the former southern Stoorish.

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">Hobbit women also wore names of flowers and jewels. Notably, noble Took and Brandybuck women had names of exotic and mythical plants (cf. Amaranth, Belladonna), compared to ordinary names of the Bagginses or Gamgees (Marigold, Poppy). Jewel names were peculiar to higher class, such as the Tooks, or women marrying into the Took family, and then Boffins, Bolgers and Gardners (Adamanta, Berylla, Ruby).

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">The most common names were worn by the middle class, such as the Bagginses of the late Third Age; they were short and meaningless, perhaps derived from the above legendary names. Male names ended in -a while females ended in -o or -e.

Vocabulary peculiarities
<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">The major difference between Hobbitish and more proper forms of Westron are many archaic words that Hobbits retained in their vocabulary from whatever languages they spoke in ancient times. Examples would include:


 * Hobbit (kuduk) - the word Hobbits called themselves. It is thought to derive from the name the Northmen gave to them in the Vales of the Anduin, the Rohirric "Holbytla" (pl. "Holbytlan"), which translates into Westron as "hole-builder", due to their habit of living in holes dug into hillsides.
 * Smial (trân) - "large excavated hole used as a home" (i.e. Bag End, Brandy Hall, or Great Smials of the Tooks).
 * Mathom (kast) - "old thing which you no longer have a use for but don't want to throw away; a knick-nack; an antique" (i.e. the Mathom-house is a museum)
 * Thain - the title of the ruler of the Shire after the loss of Arvedui.
 * Withywindle - river name, peculiar to the language of the Shire.
 * Swertings - a word referring to the Swarthy Men.
 * Oliphaunts - archaic name of the gigantic beasts, also known as Mûmakil.
 * Goblin - the evil race properly termed "Orcs" in Common Speech were referred to as "Goblins" by the Hobbits. This is apparently some local colloquialism of uncertain origin. However, while this originated as a Hobbit "slang term" for Orcs, due to the presence of the Shire on the major trade route of the Great East Road, over the centuries this term was actually picked up by members of other races (much as how smoking Pipe-weed was). The term actually gained a high degree of popularity throughout Middle-earth. The term "Goblin" came to more often be used when referring to smaller Orcs, of the type Hobbits were more likely to see (rare roving bands like that led by Golfimbul). Larger soldier-Orcs bred for war were less likely to be referred to as "Goblins", because they never really encountered them, thus larger breeds of Orcs would often simply be called "Orcs".
 * Note: Tolkien's conception of what "Orcs" and "Goblins" were exactly fluctuated over time, and The Hobbit was written when these ideas had not solidified in his mind, and as such in that book he uses the two terms rather interchangeably. Later on, he more fully set down that "Orcs" was the proper term for the entire race, with "Goblins" being a colloquial Hobbit-invented term for Orcs.

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">The highest concentration of unique "Hobbitish" words are of course in the surnames of old families, place names, and calender words such as names for months, days, seasons, et cetera.

Real-world background
<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">Αll of this ties into the fact that "Westron" as it appears in the books written by J.R.R. Tolkien functions under the conceit that "Common Speech" is really a separate foreign language which Tolkien "translated" into English. For example, the name "Meriadoc Brandybuck" is "translated" into English from the "genuine Westron" name Kalimac Brandagamba (which would make it, actually "genuine Hobbitish")

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">In order to mirror the peculiar and rustic dialect of Hobbits, Tolkien invented new words by "modernizing" obsolete archaic Old English ones that had not survived in modern language; such examples are Thain from þegn, mathom from māþum and smial from smygel.

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">The most obvious linguistic parallel between the "Hobbitish" dialect and language of the Rohirrim is in the name "Hobbit" itself: according to Théoden of Rohan, there are a few legends among the Rohirrim about Hobbit-like creatures that they call the Holbytlan in Rohirric. Rohirric is actually "translated" into Old English in the books just as Westron is into English, because it is an archaic form of Westron. "Holbytlan" in Old English means "Hole-builders", an apt name for the Hobbits. However, in "genuine Westron", the word translated into English as "Hobbit", is actually "Kuduk". The corresponding "genuine Rohirric" word from which it evolved is "Kûd-dûkan".

Parallels
<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">As Tolkien did with the Mannish languages which he rendered with Germanic names, various regional Hobbitish names are usually rendered with variant forms.

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">A few hobbit names of Elvish origin are translated as Latin or Frenchified Latin names, such as Gerontius Took, Paladin Took, and Peregrin Took.
 * Westron = Modern English
 * "Middle Westron" (of the Yellowskin Book) = Middle English
 * "Old Marish-hobbitish" = (Old) Welsh
 * Fallohide names = Frankish (a variety of Old High German)
 * "Bre -landish" = Eastern Brythonic (the variety of the British Celtic language spoken in Logria, before it became "England")
 * "Buckland-ish" = Celtic influence, due to the high concentration of Stoor-Hobbit blood. The Stoors used to live near the Dunlendings  and had some linguistic influence from them.

Portrayal in adaptations
<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">1955: BBC Radio's The Lord of the Rings:


 * Adapter Terence Tiller briefly corresponded with Tolkien about what accents should be used. It is unknown if he followed Tolkien's advice.

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">1978: The Lord of the Rings (1978 film):


 * There seems to be little contrast in style, other than the rural portrayal of Samwise Gamgee.

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">1981: The Lord of the Rings (1981 radio series):


 * Any dialectical difference is completely removed. Sam speaks the same English as the other Hobbits.

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">1992: BBC Radio's Tales from the Perilous Realm:


 * In the two episodes of "The Adventures of Tom Bombadil", Jonathan Adams' portrayal of Sam Gamgee is close to over-the-top rustic. He speaks in a grumbling, low voice.

<p style="margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:0.8em;line-height:1.4em;font-family:TrebuchetMS,Arial,sans-serif;">2001: The Lord of the Rings (film series):


 * Considerable attention was paid to the dialects characters speak with and cast members trained extensively with dialogue coaches. Hobbits in the films speak with basically an English Midlands accent, because Tolkien said that the Shire was based largely on his boyhood home in the Midlands. Of the main Hobbit characters:

Categories: Sourceless | Cleanup | Hobbitish
 * Sam Gamgee speaks with the working-class rustic Midlands accent which was used as the standard for all the other minor Hobbit characters.
 * Bilbo and Frodo Baggins  because they are both book-educated, speak with a slightly more refined and less pronounced accent.
 * The actor who played Pippin, Billy Boyd, is Scottish, and originally he was supposed to speak like the others, but eventually it was decided that it was adversely affecting his comic timing. The production team then invented the justification that the Took region of the Shire is described as very hilly, so much so that when Saruman's  ruffians take over the rest of the Shire they are successfully repulsed from Took-land due to its rough terrain, and thus is it loosely analogous to Scotland. Thus, it was decided that Tooks should speak with a Scottish accent as well, and Boyd was allowed to use his normal Scottish accent when portraying Pippin for the entire trilogy of films.
 * Meriadoc Brandybuck is described as being the linguistic "oddball" of the group: he was not from any of the four farthings of the Shire, but a Brandybuck from Buckland, and thus is from a region apart. To reflect this, his accent is noticeably distinct from the other Hobbits seen on-screen, something of an invention between actor Dominic Monaghan and the dialect coaches, to reflect his unique origin.

Hobbitish