The rare deleted scene from ‘The Lord of the Rings’ in which Gandalf teaches Sindarin to Frodo, or tries to

The rare deleted scene from ‘The Lord of the Rings’ in which Gandalf teaches Sindarin to Frodo, or tries to
The rare deleted scene from ‘The Lord of the Rings’ in which Gandalf teaches Sindarin to Frodo, or tries to

It is one of the languages ​​invented by Tolkien

Frodo and Gandalf are good friends and we can’t get enough of seeing more of them

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One of the most beloved and successful film franchises of all time, The Lord of the ringscontinues to be an inexhaustible source of curiosities and surprises for its fans, who lately have been in luck with various ads related to the work of JRR Tolkien in which Peter Jackson, the director of the original trilogy, or his trusted scriptwriters, are involved.

But returning to the work that we were able to see for the first time in 2001, of which we never get tired, The Fellowship of the Ring still have scenes we had not seen and that they were not included either in the extended version, with 4 hours of footage, or among the bonus content of the DVDs or Blu-rays, and the fact is that the seconds that you are about to witness They are part of the other trilogy.

That’s because The Hobbitwhich should never have been a story told in three parts but in two and I won’t move on from there, was included among the scenes deleted from the Blu-ray of The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armieshis third film, this sequence in which Gandalf reviews basic concepts of Sindarin with Frodoone of the languages ​​created by Tolkien, how to use the plural.

A video that seems to belong to The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring but it never made the cut, not even to fatten up the already long extended version.

What is Sindarin?

JRR Tolkien, the author of The Lord of the ringswas not only a novelist and philologist, but also a prominent linguist. His deep knowledge and love of languages ​​played a crucial role in the creation of his most famous works, which he endowed with their own languages.

Among them we find Quenya and Sindarinwhich are two forms of elvish. These languages ​​are not mere superficial inventions; They have complete grammars, extensive vocabularies, and well-defined phonetic structures. Quenya, for example, is inspired by ancient languages ​​such as Finnish and Latin, while Sindarin is influenced by Welsh.

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