Veron in Arda
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"Do you want to learn my language as I learn Thindarin, in case anyone ever needs to know it for some reason, or just focus on teaching me as fast as possible?"

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" - I think there's someone who tries to pick up Mannish languages? There are so many of them and they haven't many speakers each, and I don't have a particular gift for it. I'd be delighted to learn a few phrases."

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That sure is some casual cultural dismissal that's going on there. Almost makes him feel like he's in the Plane of Shadow again. Or maybe Hell. Or the Underdark. Or anywhere he's been, really. 'Weak, short lived, frail, and stupid,' is the general opinion of humans, as far as he can tell. Which is unfair, but then, the general opinion of kobolds is that they're filthy thieving vermin, and that's even less fair. So maybe humans don't have it so bad.

"It's called Common, which - you got the meaning of that along with the word, right? It's pretty much the best language I know of for talking to as many different groups of people, where I come from. Not going to be a problem of not enough speakers of it, just that they're all very far away and you might not meet any of them."

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"Where are you from exactly?"

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"Place called Hilltop." He sends a visual of a cute, sleepy little town located in the foothills of the Nether Mountains. It's a nice quiet place to live, except for the figuratively biting cold and the more literally biting wildlife.

"It's pretty far away," he says, sagely. He is aware of how much of an understatement this is. He doesn't really see a reason to expand on it right now.

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"I didn't know there were proper human towns east of here. I can find someone who'll be delighted to learn the language and then make songs so everyone else can pick it up."

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"I'm not sure it's to the east, exactly, but - yeah, if it wouldn't be too much trouble. It's meant to be an easy language to pick up."

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"If we do make it over there in a couple centuries they'll probably be speaking something completely different, but I bet the lord Curufin'll be annoyed if we missed getting a record all the same."

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"Sure, whichever you'd like. If I have time and paper I could maybe write up something on it. The alphabet, at least."

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"- you're literate? Humans usually aren't."

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"Oh, yeah. I am. My teacher made sure of that. In Common, anyway. Dethek's a bit more hit and miss with me. Dethek being a language I'm sort of conversational in, but haven't used in years."

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"Well, I'll find someone who can take useful notes."

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"All right. Thank you very much."

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"Sure. Thindarin's alphabet is easy to pick up, everything's spelled how it sounds and the letters are designed to show how it's spoken, too."

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Nod. "That'll make it easier. Do you want to have the first study session now? I have writing utensils and paper with me, I can get Thindarin's alphabet written down so I can study it."

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"Sure." He gestures at the pretty swoopy letters on the signs on the translation booth. "It looks like that, written."

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"Pretty," says Veron, sincerely. He retrieves a book from his pack - one of the blank ones, not the journal that includes orc language translations - and a pen.

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....nice stuff, for a human. He's sort of absurdly suspicious of this human but whatever, if he's a disguised agent of the Enemy there's nothing to be lost by teaching him the language. 

 

And he teaches him the letters and how you modify them to indicate where they're articulated and whether they're voiced, and the four sounds which this does not characterize well, and that's all there is to written Thindarin. 

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Veron isn't trying to be actively unsuspicious - he doesn't think he could pull off 'innocuous ordinary human' from 'complete stranger to this entire plane of existence,' or that he even wants to. Too close to directly lying to them, and frankly, he'd rather not.

 

Written Thindarin is really straightforward! He appreciates it. He catches on to the rules quickly enough, and spends a few minutes to write his full name in Tengwar, to test his ability to apply concepts. His handwriting isn't up to Elven standards, but it's neat enough for a human.

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And the Elf will talk in Thindarin and send interpretations as they go. Then he pulls out a map. Here they are; here's the territory they control (it's a lot), here's where the humans live, here's where various persons of importance live (the King is way west of here), up north is Angband.

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Veron takes notes on Thindarin grammar and vocabulary! In Common.

"What's in Angband?" he wonders, when Angband is pointed at.

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"The Enemy."

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"Okay, and what's that, and what earned the eponymous title?"

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"This world was created by the Ainur - gods of various strength - under the direction of Eru, and the fifteen most powerful Ainur are called the Valar, and one of them is the Enemy, and he is the god of evil, and he earned the title by introducing evil to the world and then committing it in great abundance, and all free peoples of the world are united to war against him."

 

 

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Blink.

"When you say committing it in great abundance, what did he do? And by what mechanism did he introduce evil, what did the world look like before he did that?"

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