Drúwaith Iaur - The Mysterious Wilderness of the South

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  • Опубліковано 29 чер 2024
  • In this video, we will be talking about Drúwaith Iaur, a mysterious wilderness to the west of Gondor. What was going on there? What did it look like? And did anyone live there?
    Thanks to my patrons - Gavin, Javi Iñesta ,Brn, JIV, Fipse, W Sean Mason, boi sophies, Stonetruck, ThunderStryken, Hallimar Rathlorn, Habimana, Ben Jeffrey, Harry Evett, Mojtaba Ro, Moe L, Paul Leone, Barbossa, mncb1o, Carrot Ifson, Andrew Welch and Catherine Berry
    Patreon - / darthgandalf
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 129

  • @romanmoravcik7048
    @romanmoravcik7048 21 день тому +148

    There is more wilderness in middle-earth than actual civilisation

    • @General12th
      @General12th 21 день тому +34

      For all the valor and glory of the previous ages -- for how much greater their people were and how grand their arts and architecture -- it sure feels like most of Middle Earth was a barren, dangerous wasteland until people started settling it more during the fourth age.

    • @vulture4117
      @vulture4117 21 день тому +9

      in real life too

    • @thomasalvarez6456
      @thomasalvarez6456 21 день тому +5

      Just like our planet used to be.

    • @Diegoromir
      @Diegoromir 21 день тому +27

      I see this more as a sign of the population decline of the late Third Age, after centuries of war and a Great Plague that wiped out most of the populations of the great kingdoms, which never fully recovered from that event.
      I personally believe that there were several settlements that Tolkien did not mention that at the end of the Third Age were nothing more than ruins, shadows of a Golden Age where civilization thrived.

    • @TheRealMycanthrope
      @TheRealMycanthrope 21 день тому +2

      Sounds great

  • @Gray-el1nh
    @Gray-el1nh 21 день тому +77

    this is the first lotr video on youtube where i didn’t know the location it was being talked about so i am IMPRESSED- love your vids keep it up

  • @Uncle_Fred
    @Uncle_Fred 21 день тому +67

    I would also add that Drúwaith Iaur would make a workable refuge of last resort had Sauron won.
    It's remote yet within reach of Gondor. It's protected in the west by the ocean, and in the south and east by mountains with no history of Goblin infestation. To the North, it's protected by a major freshwater river. It has caves and a population of men extremely hostile to Orcs, and a possible settlement of Elves nearby.
    This is about as perfect a refuge from Sauron as you can find on the map of Middle Earth. A small remnant of Gondorians could survive a very long time there in an age dominated by Sauron.

    • @sionefinaulahi9879
      @sionefinaulahi9879 21 день тому +2

      What do you mean by a possible settlement of elves nearby?

    • @acrustykrab
      @acrustykrab 21 день тому

      ​@@sionefinaulahi9879just that the area seems like a nice place for a hidden settlement like Rivendell

    • @jamesgwoodwork
      @jamesgwoodwork 21 день тому +2

      Sounds a bit like the Bay of Balar in the first age. That didn't go well either.

    • @Uncle_Fred
      @Uncle_Fred 21 день тому +3

      @@jamesgwoodwork Yes, I think they would be flushed out eventually. However, if they were wise, they'd operate much like Lothlorien and keep to themselves, allowing no intruders to escape. It could buy them a few generations of relative peace.

    • @WolfetoneRebel1916
      @WolfetoneRebel1916 21 день тому +1

      @@Uncle_Fred Lothlorien or Rivendell could not have existed as they did without Gondor holding back Mordor.

  • @seedbarrett6853
    @seedbarrett6853 21 день тому +44

    I'd love to hear about Eryn Vorn

    • @tomk1055
      @tomk1055 21 день тому +3

      Yes!

    • @seawind930
      @seawind930 День тому

      It was a forested region that used to extend in to Enedwaith but now only exists in patches in Minhiriath. In Sindarin it meant Black Wood. It was deforested by the Numenoreans who were looking for material to build ships, and then it was burned by the forces of Sauron when he declared war on the Elves in the Second Age. It was inhabited and most of the people were driven out going to places like Bree and Dunland. Lond Daer was a Numenorean Haven that may or may not still be inhabited that lay in those lands (same with Tharbad).

  • @PiraticalBob
    @PiraticalBob 21 день тому +16

    I've thought a time or two of writing a fanfic about the Druedain of Druwaith Iaur - - I envision Maglor Son of Feanor dwelling there in a cave part of the year, and other times he wanders up and down the coastline; he is known to the Druedain, and trades/barters with them for his simple needs, on rare occasions making music for them or serving them as a healer, since his knowledge of Elven healing surpasses their own more primitive skill.

    • @ciaranirvine
      @ciaranirvine 21 день тому +2

      I like that idea - Maglor roams the desolate coasts between Eryn Vorn and Andrast lamenting his lost Silmaril. So there are - very rare and disputed - alleged sightings of Maglor down the millennia, but nobody knows for sure if he still lives (apart from the Druedain, who aren't telling)

    • @capuchinhelper
      @capuchinhelper 18 днів тому

      I imagine a time in the Fourth Age when another surviving Balrog is found, and with everyone else gone to Valinor, Maglor would be the only remaining dude powerful enough to defeat it.

  • @cavetroll666
    @cavetroll666 21 день тому +16

    thanks for the video i hope Lotro adds this one day

  • @dominus1444
    @dominus1444 21 день тому +9

    I would love to see some videos on merp lore and other fan created sources. There is essentially no one on UA-cam covering it. There is definitely some crazy wacky stuff in there but most of that can be ignored in favor of the tons of amazing worldbuilding. I would particularly love to see a video on Bellakar.

    • @DarthGandalfYT
      @DarthGandalfYT  20 днів тому +2

      I've actually been heavily considering it because I do love some of the MERP stuff.

  • @user-yy5xs6xj7r
    @user-yy5xs6xj7r 21 день тому +12

    What about the cape of Andrast itself? In some places it is described as a part of Gondor, but in others it is said that the western border of Gondor was the river Lefnui, and all areas beyond it were considered parts of Druwaith Iaur. Also there are no warriors from Andrast that came to fight for Minas Tirith (while there were reinforcements from Anfalas), so it seems that at least in the end of the Third Age Andras was at least de-facto independent. Since there are some mentions of Numenorian bases in Andrast, I doubt it was completely wild, though. So a semi-independent lordship inhabited by mixed people seemes the most likely situation there (similar to Isengard before it was given to Saruman).

    • @einfachignorieren6156
      @einfachignorieren6156 20 днів тому +1

      Andreas is part of gondor de jure not de facto, there is the fortress of thorogrondost
      And ras morthil a retreat for the kings of old, everything else is wilderness or local clans

    • @maximus3160
      @maximus3160 15 днів тому

      @@einfachignorieren6156 WHAT?

  • @rofald
    @rofald 21 день тому +7

    Love hearing about the more obscure places in Middle-Earth and how you can draw such logical and sensible conclusions about the nature of these places when there is so little written about them in Tolkien's books. In addition to Druedain, I wonder if Avari or Nandorin elves also inhabited that region. The Silmarillion does mention Avari living in the wild southern forest of Taur-in-Duinath and Nandorin elves in Ossiriand in Beleriand, so it's possible that there might have been Avari or Nandorin settlements all along the remote western regions near the coast. These elves might have have also taught the Druedain their woodcraft which would explain the almost magical way they could avoid detection in forests.
    Two remote and obscure regions I'd be interested in learning more about are Avathar and Araman, the uninhabited southern and northern parts of the continent of Aman. There's little enough written about either place, but what there is seems to indicate that the Valars' influence in maintaining an uncorrupted land did not extend to all parts of their continent.

    • @coreyander286
      @coreyander286 21 день тому +1

      It's interesting how Tolkien uses "woodcraft" to mean "skills used to avoid detection in forests". Wouldn't have ever expected it to be used in any other way than carpentry. I guess Naked Snake from MGS3 has good woodcraft.

    • @DarthGandalfYT
      @DarthGandalfYT  20 днів тому +2

      Avari may have lived there before the Third Age, but we're told that no Avari lived west of the Misty Mountains during the Third Age so that would rule Druwaith Iaur out.

    • @rofald
      @rofald 20 днів тому +1

      @@DarthGandalfYT Thanks for the information.😀

  • @ryanstephenson7312
    @ryanstephenson7312 21 день тому +8

    Druwaith Iaur would be a good place to look for the Entwives

    • @thecappeningchannel515
      @thecappeningchannel515 20 днів тому +4

      They were killed in the Brown Lands during the war between sauron and elves.

    • @klhaldane
      @klhaldane 18 днів тому

      @@thecappeningchannel515 Unless they were able to flee, but had to go so far the Ents never located them again.

  • @q0w1e2r3t4y5
    @q0w1e2r3t4y5 21 день тому +17

    Drew-wayth yah-oor, not ee-yah-(glottal stop)-her

    • @vespasiancloscan7077
      @vespasiancloscan7077 17 днів тому +1

      *"waith" has the same diphtong/vowel sounds as "white" or "why", not as "wait" or "way".
      Also, the stress is on the first syllables of both words. So, DREW-whyth YAH-oor

    • @AntonSmirnov87
      @AntonSmirnov87 14 днів тому +1

      Agreed. Same as Sindarin "iavas" is prounounced "yah-vas", simiilar to it's Quendi counterpart "yavie", rather than "ee-ah-vas", or Tom Bombadil's Elven name being "Iarwain Ben-adar", which was pronounced "Yar-wine".

  • @ChrisVillagomez
    @ChrisVillagomez 17 днів тому +1

    I love these kinds of videos, I didn't know that bit about Saruman's forces running into the Druedain after the First Battle of the Fords of Isen

  • @halokiller031
    @halokiller031 21 день тому +6

    I just noticed that Anfalas has the name (langstrand) which is swedish for long beach. 10/10 Tolkien

  • @paulraines9635
    @paulraines9635 21 день тому +3

    The underdevelopment of the Isen Delta always struck me as odd.

  • @user-rr2ui5dx5y
    @user-rr2ui5dx5y 21 день тому +8

    Can you do a video on Middle Earth Role Playing lore? They have really cool tales about far harad like Ciryatandor

    • @coreyander286
      @coreyander286 21 день тому

      It's hard to find info about MERP lore. Even when I find uploads of the world map, none have high enough resolution for me to read the tiny labels of regions in the original parts of the map.

  • @PenguinofD00mxxx
    @PenguinofD00mxxx 21 день тому +39

    My favorite part about looking at maps of Arda/ Middle Earth is looking at the more obscure places and imagining what life would be like. Or what stories may have taken place, that we are just not privy to.

    • @ZephyrOptional
      @ZephyrOptional 21 день тому +3

      My favorite places to go in my mind while looking at the maps would be Ossiriand & the Dwarven kingdoms of Belegost & Nogrod & the birth places of men & elves, Hildorien & Cuivienen. I had such a vivid picture in my mind of Dorthonion I had to sketch a mountain forest landscape with a small, worried and wary people moving through the trees. Love my ragged old Fonstad Atlas!

  • @WhoIsCalli
    @WhoIsCalli 10 днів тому

    Very obscure and I loved it, thanks for this

  • @joshman531
    @joshman531 21 день тому +2

    Another obscure location maybe worth a video is Taur-im Duinath in the very south of the map of Beleriand, but I don't remeber it ever being mentioned in the Silmarilion.

  • @thomassaxon8254
    @thomassaxon8254 21 день тому +3

    It's definitely places like this that let imagination run wild in Middle-earth. Truly you could have nearly anything in there trying to coexist with the Druedain.

  • @HeraldofHelios
    @HeraldofHelios 21 день тому +1

    Great video mate. Would be awesome to see a video on Harondor (South Gondor). Perhaps it had scant Gondorian settlements; but like Osgiliath, it changed hands between Gondor and Harad over the years

  • @mdefoe28
    @mdefoe28 21 день тому +2

    It is strange how apparently there wasn't any gondorian settlement in Andrast, despite its strategic location controlling the sea route and its safety from outside threats.

  • @gnarlynarly1350
    @gnarlynarly1350 21 день тому +1

    An in-depth video on the middel men would be cool the only ones we get sort of alot of information on is the dunlendings but even then not that much. Keep up the good work

  • @anti-liberalismo
    @anti-liberalismo 20 днів тому +1

    I always conquer Druwaith Iaur first in DAC when i play with Gondor, best decision i ever do while holding the Anduin.
    Also what a gigachad voice, Mr Darth Gandalf

  • @PeculiarNotions
    @PeculiarNotions 21 день тому +2

    I'm always a fan of these lesser known regions.

  • @vincentphilippart4669
    @vincentphilippart4669 13 днів тому

    I haven't watched the video yet, but I've been hoping for an answer to that question for almost a decade. Pretty excited!!!

  • @johnt.inscrutable1545
    @johnt.inscrutable1545 21 день тому +1

    Great video on a people I wish we had more stories about. Also, excellent music under the narration.
    Vids about DIFFERSNT PARTS OF belariand.

  • @mattcarnevali
    @mattcarnevali 14 днів тому +1

    I’d be interested in obscure geography from all ages. What did Valimar look like? What would a city designed by and housing the Valar look like?

  • @hglundahl
    @hglundahl 12 днів тому +1

    7:30 I is Y. AU is OW. R is pronounced as a consonant.
    There are pronunciation guides in Silmarillion and I think even LotR.

  • @fgf4973
    @fgf4973 21 день тому +1

    So interesting to see how diverse the race of men is. High men, Middle men, Hobbits, Druedain, Troll men... would be cool to see more expansion of their lore

  • @yapyap333
    @yapyap333 21 день тому +2

    First! Love your work.

  • @joshthomasmoorenew
    @joshthomasmoorenew 21 день тому

    Would you consider doing a video on the Barrow Blades, as i've seen a few misconseptions about them, like them breaking the Witch King's non-exsistant Invunrabilty spell, also they seem like a really intresting topic for a video, plus its an excuse to talk about parts of Arnor which is always nice.

  • @Marcotonio
    @Marcotonio 21 день тому +1

    That fills a big gap in my knowledge about the area, didn't remember anything about it (if it's mentioned in Silmarillion/LOTR).
    Still, the whole South of Gondor is still quite foggy. We read about the hosts that came from these regions to help in the war, but we never got much detail about what is in there. Rohan to the North, Minas Tirith to the East, Drúwaith Iaur to West, and then what's going on South of the Ered Nimrais?
    Any History, invasions, culture, peoples in there? My mind says "half-elf swan prince with blue banner", but it's probably an amalgamation of 3 different things. Man, I should re-read the whole thing.

    • @ciaranirvine
      @ciaranirvine 21 день тому +1

      Pretty much spot on - you are thinking of Imrahil, Prince of Dol Amroth. His family were alleged to be part Elf (descended from one of the companions of Nimrodel, I think? Though that could just be legend) and Legolas confirms he has at least some Elven blood. He and his Swan Knights were Gondor's elite Heavy Cavalry. Technically/legally with Denethor dead and Faramir incapacitated, Imrahil was next in the chain of command and in charge of Gondor for the Last Debate and march on the Black Gate, though personally he deferred to Aragorn.
      The southern region of Gondor seems to be quite populous and developed, but yeah we never really get much detail or "local colour" apart from Dol Amroth - and some brief snippets from the Second Age about the great Numenorean port city of Pelargir, and an ancient Elven haven at Edhellond

    • @Marcotonio
      @Marcotonio 21 день тому +1

      @@ciaranirvine Woah, my memory is better than I expected, nice. Thanks for the detailed answer!
      As for population, the feeling we get from the way Gondor is presented is that 80% of the population is in Minas Tirith and then some backwater nobles come to help from the southern region, but would it be correct to assume it's quite the opposite, with the capital being a small portion of Gondor's population?

    • @ciaranirvine
      @ciaranirvine 21 день тому

      @@Marcotonio Yeah that's my take. Minas Tirith seems to be more of a fortress-town and also one in decline - Pippin notices lots of empty homes. The southern lords didn't send many troops to the battle but that's because they were keeping most of their their own forces on the coast, expecting a massive invasion by the Corsairs - which Aragorn unexpectedly defeated with the Army of the Dead.
      I think there was a line in the Last Debate that now the Corsair threat was over, those south coast troops could be redeployed to Minas Tirith, and that by the next week the city would actually be better defended than before the battle started - even with Aragorn leading his entire army north to the Black Gate. So the south coast region must be pretty populous and prosperous and able to field decent armies. I don't think Gondor could have lasted as the power it was for so many years if it was 80% Minas Tirith, it must be the other way round

  • @backwashjoe7864
    @backwashjoe7864 21 день тому +1

    Druwaith Iaur is definitely a drinking game that I regret!

  • @istari0
    @istari0 21 день тому

    Great video. If I had ever read anything on this, I forgot it some time ago. Maybe they could have hidden the One Ring there; Sauron would have never found it! 🙃

  • @bristleconepine4120
    @bristleconepine4120 21 день тому

    Suggestion for geography: what were the elevations of the various mountain ranges that we know about? (I can imagine this being a multi-part video, one to do with the mountain ranges in ME at the end of the Third Age, and another to deal with those former mountain ranges, and those outside of ME)

  • @dansuciu733
    @dansuciu733 21 день тому

    you nailed it again, keep doing the same,

  • @CatnicImprover
    @CatnicImprover 16 днів тому

    Dorwinion - It's not marked on less detailed maps but is to the north west of the Sea of Rhun and is supposedly where the wine that the people of Lake Town shipped to the Wood Elves came from, so it seems like it was inhabited by settled and civilised people.

  • @Callisto_Arcas
    @Callisto_Arcas 20 днів тому +1

    I had always assumed Iaur was pronounced I(ee)-aur(hour/our). Basing that on the fact that 'au' is usually pronounced like 'hour/our', such as Sauron, Smaug, Taur-nu-Fuin, Anfauglith, etc.

    • @vespasiancloscan7077
      @vespasiancloscan7077 17 днів тому

      It's a "y" sound as in "yes", not "ee" as in "eeny meeny". YAH-oor. Two syllables, first one stressed.

  • @CiudadanosdeBien
    @CiudadanosdeBien 21 день тому +2

    Why do you pronounce Iaur as if an h was before the u ?

  • @sneakyfred
    @sneakyfred 21 день тому +3

    Interesting topic, but I found the pronunciation of the area's name so jarring: you get Druedain right, and the "ai" in Druwaith has the same pronunciation (like "eye"); instead Iaur should be something like "yowl" but with an "R" at the end instead of "L" (it has a very a Welsh-like sound, in my opinion!)

  • @Byenie0912
    @Byenie0912 21 день тому +8

    As a DAC TW player, that area is the worst place to hold on to. It has no population nor any castle to recruit stronger units
    If anything starts coming from the north, it’s over

  • @apstrike
    @apstrike 21 день тому +2

    I'd like to buy a vowel, please.

  • @beyondthewall1501
    @beyondthewall1501 21 день тому +1

    I always pronounced the name as: drew-eye-th iyawr (English pronounciation above, save for rolling r:s and i:s always pronounced as "ee").

  • @bokakev
    @bokakev 21 день тому +2

    Every other channel does the same old topics over and over. This channel makes originality look easy, somehow.

  • @TheLyricalCleric
    @TheLyricalCleric 19 днів тому +1

    I would have imagined it as Ee-YAWR, like the way “SAWYRon” is pronounced in the Lord of the Rings moves.

    • @vespasiancloscan7077
      @vespasiancloscan7077 17 днів тому

      It's just like the "saur" in Sauron, except the first sound is a "y". So not "ee-aur" but "yaur".

  • @deathstroke2697
    @deathstroke2697 17 днів тому

    I woul like to know more about Taur-im-Duinath. Sounds like a darker Mirkwood.

  • @coreyander286
    @coreyander286 21 день тому +1

    Drew Eighth Yower. (Yower rhymes with "shower".) That's what I'm going with. Either Yower or E-hour.

    • @vespasiancloscan7077
      @vespasiancloscan7077 17 днів тому

      "Waith" rhymes with "white", not with "eight".
      "Iaur" indeed has a "y" sound, not a "ee" one.
      And it's more of a YAH-oor. "A" as in "father", not as in "cat", and then no final "err" sound, you jump from "u" straight to "r".

  • @nathynorthy6916
    @nathynorthy6916 21 день тому +1

    How is Gondor "to the west" of Drúwaith Iaur? 1:28

  • @Dunedainv3
    @Dunedainv3 21 день тому +1

    Darth Gandalf when Obi Wan Saruman pulls up:

  • @ohmyshou1der
    @ohmyshou1der 21 день тому +2

    Drink every time he said Drúwaith Iaur

  • @dubya85
    @dubya85 4 дні тому

    Which lotro server are you on?

  • @aidanwotherspoon905
    @aidanwotherspoon905 15 днів тому

    Drúwaith Iaur? I hardly know her!

  • @robmcelwee389
    @robmcelwee389 20 днів тому

    Wasn't Tharbad there?

    • @DarthGandalfYT
      @DarthGandalfYT  18 днів тому +1

      Tharbad was further to the north at the border of Enedwaith and Minhiriath.

    • @robmcelwee389
      @robmcelwee389 18 днів тому

      @DarthGandalfYT was Tharbad part of Arnor or was it abandoned by the Third Age? If I am not mistaken it was hurt by the plague and ruined by floods.

  • @JorenR
    @JorenR 21 день тому

    Next LOTRO expansion in Drúwaith Iaur confirmed

  • @andrewwarren8474
    @andrewwarren8474 21 день тому

    I’m curious about if any human populations existed in former Arnor at the time of lord of the rings besides the Rangers and the Breelanders. As far as I can tell, the former northern kingdom was almost completely depopulated. How was Arbor reestablished with no native population?

    • @user-yy5xs6xj7r
      @user-yy5xs6xj7r 19 днів тому

      There definitely were human populations around Tharbad (the city itself was abandoned, but the surrounding villages probably were not). Tolkien also mentioned hunter-folk in the woods of Minhiriath (maybe related to the people of Eryn Vorn, maybe not). Frodo also said that "Down in the Southfarthing they have had trouble with the Big People, I believe"/ Another populatrion Tolkien mentioned was fisherfolk in the mouths of Isen and Gwathlo (maybe related to the people of DruwaithIaur). There were also the villagers eaten by the trolls in the "Hobbit". It seems that southern refugees in Bree and Saruman's ruffians came from some of those populations.

  • @jcook693
    @jcook693 21 день тому +10

    Druedain, the indigenous people of Middle Earth

    • @alfieingrouille1528
      @alfieingrouille1528 21 день тому +8

      No not really how it works

    • @HBon111
      @HBon111 21 день тому +2

      All men descend from the first men who awoke in the Far East of Middle Earth.

    • @jcook693
      @jcook693 21 день тому +3

      Relax guys I just meant they were the first people in the area and then they got moved around a few times

  • @spaceman9599
    @spaceman9599 11 днів тому

    Druwaith 'Yawr' (if it pronounces like the Celtic base language), not 'Yahuh'. Interesting obscure place indeed.

  • @ilari90
    @ilari90 20 днів тому

    Dagoth "Ia" Ur, checks.

  • @MagisterErik
    @MagisterErik 13 днів тому

    It's more like "jaur", one fluent word. There is no need for the glottal stops between the vowels.

  • @jamaigar
    @jamaigar 20 днів тому +2

    Lindon and Forlindon are interesting to me. A remnant of the noldor realms of belariand that seems to be mentioned several times and plays a part in wars of the second and third age but it seems to never have been explored or developed

  • @crowverra5343
    @crowverra5343 21 день тому

    The last desert and the lands of lostladen

  • @1into1
    @1into1 19 днів тому

    Allow me to assist you: Drew-eye-th Ee-our (as in the possessive pronoun 'our'). In Tolkien's pronunciations, which he very specifically lists in the Appendices to Return of the King (do look into this for future pronunciation assistance), 'ai' is pronounced 'eye', and 'au' is pronounced 'ow' as in 'ow that hurts'. For example, Sauron is 'Sowron' or 'Souron', not 'Sore-on'.

    • @vespasiancloscan7077
      @vespasiancloscan7077 17 днів тому

      YAH-oor. At the beginning of a word before a vowel, Sindarin "i" is pronounced like the English "y".

    • @1into1
      @1into1 16 днів тому

      @@vespasiancloscan7077 You are not wrong, but I will be more precise. I used 'ee' to represent the long 'e' vowel, same pronunciation as 'y'. Using a hyphen was intended as a clarification for each phoneme, not to suggest a glottal stop in the middle of the word. A more precise way (I suppose) to represent the word would be 'Yowr' (as in 'your', 'yes', etc.). The 'y' is soft, with emphasis on the 'ow' (au), and a flicked 'r' at the end.

  • @obxwave
    @obxwave 21 день тому +12

    Your pronunciation seems a bit unnatural to me…in most real human languages, the initial I sound (I.e. “ee”) would turn into a semivowel Y, so perhaps “yah-ur” would be the result, or even “yaur” pronounced as one syllable.

    • @vespasiancloscan7077
      @vespasiancloscan7077 16 днів тому +3

      Spot on.
      And it'd normally be one syllable. "Au" in Sindarin is a diphtong: "a" as in "father" and "w" as in "cow". But, the R at the end forces the diphtong to split, and the "w" becomes an "oo" in a second syllable.

  • @SEKreiver
    @SEKreiver 17 днів тому

    'Iaur' is pronounced roughly like 'tower'.

  • @albarron4022
    @albarron4022 21 день тому +3

    You are murdering the pronunciation bud

  • @michaelsmyth3935
    @michaelsmyth3935 21 день тому

    Dru ih wathe eye ur

  • @whyismyricewet1986
    @whyismyricewet1986 20 днів тому

    Bruh just play Minecraft LOTR they have the deuwaith taur biome

  • @wedgeantillies66
    @wedgeantillies66 18 днів тому

    Certainly sounds like they were a reclusive and yet deadly, woodland and cave dwelling people who occasionally prove to be of use to the free peoples of middle earth in their struggles against the forces of Evil in middle earth.

  • @cowboystormchaser
    @cowboystormchaser 20 днів тому

    Ah, gotta love Middle Earth colonialism.

  • @hglundahl
    @hglundahl 12 днів тому

    0:38 droo-withthe yowr.
    Like unvoice th, hence the unusual spelling, but Iaur is actually one syllable, and "waith" is not "weith"