The written forms of Sindarin just look like old Irish script 'Cló Gaelach'. We still use it for street signs shops plaques and monuments but mostly in the country not in Dublin though you will still see it in some places. And nobody uses it to write anymore! The invention and emergence of printing-press forced Cló Gaelach out of use as even newspapers printing in the Irish language was printed in a anglosized characterisation!
You kinda missed Róhirric the tongue spoken by the eotheod which was heavily based upon the Anglo Saxon but thank you nonetheless for mentioning Adūnaic (my favourite) the ancestral language that helped shaped westron.
The written forms of Sindarin just look like old Irish script 'Cló Gaelach'. We still use it for street signs shops plaques and monuments but mostly in the country not in Dublin though you will still see it in some places. And nobody uses it to write anymore! The invention and emergence of printing-press forced Cló Gaelach out of use as even newspapers printing in the Irish language was printed in a anglosized characterisation!
Tengwar! Thats it... thats the one that look like Cló Gaelach! VERY much so! lol
Wooow I will check that for sure!
You kinda missed Róhirric the tongue spoken by the eotheod which was heavily based upon the Anglo Saxon but thank you nonetheless for mentioning Adūnaic (my favourite) the ancestral language that helped shaped westron.
I would love to learn Quenya and have someone to practice with. I do not like Sindarin very much, though.
Quenya is prestigue :D
❤
@@Ms.Robot. ❤️🙏