…well, this took something of an odd turn. Hopefully that can resolve itself. In the meantime:
MANHIRI: INTRODUCTION AND NOUN CLASSES
Manhiri is the Haradrimic language spoken in Manhir, the nearest portion of Harad to Gondor. The Men of Harad are swarthy, to be sure, and their soldiers clad in strange mail. But this description is lacking. For starters, there is no mention of the
Nayfam and
Ngashti Rivers (together the Harnen River), running southwest from the Ephel Duath across the desert, meeting at the
Shama and pouring out at the Delta (
mupar, older *
umpar), making the hot sands fertile through their flooding. Nor of the ancient worship, before the Black Númenoreans came, of
Imbi the Guiding Star (that is, Eärendil), or
Ukwar the Mother of Life (Yavanna, most like), or
Ihful the Creator-In-Darkness (a figure who may have been Melkor or may have been Eru). The rich riverside fields, the scrolls of reeds inscribed with colourful writing in Adûnaic cursive, the copses of once-great groves of cedar and oak, pistachio and almond…none of these are written of by the authors of the
Red Book, because none could ever have seen them.
And yet they are there, and have had a rich and complex society for six thousand years. All agriculture started in Númenor, they say, and yet it did not truly
thrive until it came to the Nayfam and Ngashti. (In those days they were the *
anyaφam and *
aŋçiθiʔ, and these are reflected in their Adûnaic names,
Anyapha and
Ankhêth.) Here was where humans first built stone structures, they say: great steppe-pyramids of brick and mortar, with hidden aqueducts and fountains creating waterfall gardens that seem to have been open for public use. Great libraries, too, were filled with fired tablets of clay, hieroglyphs impressed and then inlaid with red or white slip, so the words shine bright against the black background. The cities were not often at war with each other, it seems, but kept torches burning bright against the creatures in the dark--and the darkness did come to them, in the form of orcs. For a time the cities were largely abandoned, and it has been long since any lived in the land who could read the ancient words. Then came the Black Númenoreans, who "rebuilt" the "savage people", giving them a new hope--and a new, single deity to worship,
Mulhir, a worship which united the clans not along the rivers but with a capital at the delta, in Umbar. And so the fate of the Haradrim was to lose their land to the Kingdom of Umbar, and then under the rule of Gondor, until they were able to reclaim it--with the aid of the very Corsairs who had given them their new faith to begin with.
The First Stage
Back in the Second Age, it seems as though the formation of words in Proto-Haradrimic was through prefixes with rough equivalencies. The linguist Pedant of Gondor (yes, I know, but that's actually what I had in mind) suggests the following:
That the Men of Harad had some knowledge of sounds, either from the Elves or from the earlier Númenóreans; for their prefixes were crudely placed, but made to mimic in sound the following consonant. Thus, what we deem as a só
[*s] in a prefix might well have been an oha
before one of the quessë-series, or a sound like that of a whí before a letter of the parma-series [transcriber's note: *[s] became *[ç] before gutturals and *[ʍ] before labials]
. This would have been disguised by the transformation of oha
to shé
and whí
to alo [transcriber's note: [ç] to [ʃ] and [ʍ] to [l]]
by the the 23rd Century of the Second Age.
Pedant goes on to suggest that further obscuring came about through a metathesis of prefix-initial vowels within the word--*uN became *Nu and so forth. (There appears to be some evidence for this in studies of the related Tunayb language closer to Khand, where it appears the entire noun class prefix turned into an infix.) A few points of comparison cross-linguistically:
English Gloss | Manhiri | Tunayb | Umphaka |
"oliphaunt" | mumak | mumak | ombaka |
"river" | ngushwu | shungu | ongoshu |
"ent" | lapthut | pavzod | awapudho |
"Melkor/Eru" | Ihful | Ikhofu | Ehofu |
Noun Classes
Proto-Haradrimic has been reconstructed with no fewer than twelve noun classes, with several variations in plural numbers. In Manhiri these have (thankfully) been reduced to nine, from classes 10 through 12 largely being absorbed into Classes 2, 6, and 8.
No. | Usage | Singular | Example | Plural | Example |
1 | "human" males
solo predators | i- | itap "gift-giver, host"
ifit "lion"
Ingkanush "North-Spy (aka Gandalf)" | a-ROOT-(y)il
a-ROOT-(h)ar | atapil "hosts"
afitar "lions" |
2 | human females, pack animals
gerunds (from Class 10) | u- | umpa "huntress"
ufit "lioness" | Fi-ROOT-(y)il
Fi-ROOT-(h)ar | fimpayil "huntresses"
fifitar "lionesses" |
3 | spirits, gods
elves, ents | Sa- | shashwi "reed-spirit"
shaknar "elf, Avar" | u-ROOT-(w)us
u-ROOT-(y)il | ushwiwus "reed-spirits"
uknaril "elves" |
4 | intelligent animals, rivers | Nu- | mumak "oliphaunt" | Nu-ROOT-(y)il | mumakil "oliphaunts" |
5 | unintelligent animals | Fa- | hahnap "hyrax, rabbit" | Na-ROOT-(sh)ar | ngahnapar "hyraxes, rabbits" |
6 | plants
diminutives (from Class 12) | Fu/i- | hushwi "reed"
fiput "shrub"
fipin "'little woman'; girl who underwent menarche"
fimmar "short rest, siesta"
| Su-ROOT-(sh)as
i-ROOT-(w)ul
i-ROOT-(sh)ar
i-ROOT-(y)is | shushwishas "reeds"
iputul "shrubs"
ipinar "little women"
immaris "siestas" |
7 | places, augmentatives | Na- | Nangka "The North; Gondor"
maput "cedar tree"
ngaknil "big donkey; old nag" | Na-ROOT-(y)is
Na-ROOT-(w)ul
Na-ROOT-(sh)ar | maputul "cedar trees"
ngaknilar "old nags" |
8 | body parts, tools
dirt-objects (from Class 11) | Su- | lupak "leg"
lumir "sand" | Sa-ROOT-(sh)al
Sa-ROOT-(w)ul | lapakal "legs"
lumirul "sands" |
9 | actions, times | a- | Adak "Time of Great Music; Ainulindalië"
ahap "hyrax-movement, hop"
ahul "night, nighttime" | Si-ROOT-(w)ul
Si-ROOT-(y)is | lihapul "hops, hopping"
lihulis "nights, periods of nighttime" |
It should be noted that in transcribing Manhiri words to the Common Speech, several alterations were made based on locale. Gandalf's local name
Ingkanush "northern spy" was rendered
Incánus, representing the standard Anakkêthi accentuation of the first syllable of the root as opposed to the nominal prefix. (Note also that
Ingkanush gives us the opportunity to see how compounding works in Manhiric: [class1]+[noun2]+[noun1], normally, the second noun effectively acting as an infix.) On the other hand,
mumak "oliphaunt" went not through Minharic but through Variagi, which (given proximity to Tunyab) rendered is with a long first syllable:
mûmak. This passed into Gondor through the arrival of the Wainriders in the mid-19th Century TA, and from there remained in common parlance among the people of the south. The Westron equivalent in the north was
annabun, from Sindarin
annabon (the difference is minimal but reflected in the local pronunciation "oliphaunt" compared to Gandalf's "elephant").