About Beorn
Re: About Beorn
It's not Anglo-Saxon, it's scandinavian. (Those are two different groups.)Davio wrote: Beorn is anglosaxon (if Im not misstaken) for both Warrior and bear, which is Beorns character.
The spelling throws people off. Don't think "Beorn." Think "Bjorn." Beorn is just a variant spelling; it is pronounced the exact same way, like Steven and Stephen.
Re: About Beorn
Björn and Bjørn are Scandinavian names; Beorn is Old English, i.e., Anglo-Saxon. While the Scandinavian j appears to be the palatal approximant [j], Old English eo is a dipthong [eo], which combines the vowels of English hey and toe (sort of*) into one sound.
* Actually, all the "long" vowels in Modern English are already dipthongs, so just pay attention to the first part of the vowel before your mouth changes position.
In all cases, the name is a single syllable. It is not bee-orn or bay-orn.
* Actually, all the "long" vowels in Modern English are already dipthongs, so just pay attention to the first part of the vowel before your mouth changes position.
In all cases, the name is a single syllable. It is not bee-orn or bay-orn.
Re: About Beorn
Thanks for the heads-up on the linguistics of that, Stormcrow. I like to try to pronounce the various Tolkien names correctly, when I can.
Adventure Summaries for my long-running group (currently playing through The Darkening of Mirkwood/Mirkwood Campaign), and the Tale of Years for a second, lower-level group (in the same campaign).
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