I suspect you are alluding to Dwarfs as opposed to Dwarves.
Tolkien expanded at some length on his choice of spelling in the appendices to Lord of the Rings, but intrinsically - and certainly linguistically - he was in the right.
No. Names, titles, and common words/phrases are not eligible for copyright protection. Additional information: The word 'hobbit' was none of those when first used in J.R.R. Tolkien's novels, and, as such, is a trademark owned by the Tolkien estate.
Specifically hobbit-hole is the common word for them but Tolkien also calls them smials. JRR Tolkien explains it in the Prologue Concering Hobbits of The Fellowship of the Ring and Appendix F On Translations in The Return of the King. It's a word he invented based on an Old English word. In the world Tolkien has created, the word is translated to English by Tolkien so we can understand it. The Hobbitish word he translated is tran which is related to the Rohirric word trahan meaning burrow.
The hobbit is the main character in the book The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien.The word hobbit may come from the Old English word holbytla, which means hole-dweller.
That word does not appear in The Hobbit, nor is it a word in the language spoken by hobbits.
It does not appear in the first chapter of The Hobbit.
No. Names, titles, and common words/phrases are not eligible for copyright protection. Additional information: The word 'hobbit' was none of those when first used in J.R.R. Tolkien's novels, and, as such, is a trademark owned by the Tolkien estate.
Try not to misspell the word misspell. Every word that you misspell will be held against you.
Those letters spell the word hobbit, a mythological creature in the novels of J. R. R. Tolkien.
The word misspelled can be an adjective, a verb, or a noun.
In Chapter 4 of "The Hobbit," J.R.R. Tolkien uses the word "murmured" to describe the dwarves' conversation. This word appeals to the sense of hearing by suggesting a soft and gentle sound, creating a vivid auditory image for the readers.
He got out of the spelling competition because he misspelled a word. This is a sentence using the word misspell.
i hope i dont misspell my words on my spelling test.
He says that it simply popped into his head. He was grading exams and came upon a blank page. He wrote "In a hole there lived a hobbit." There is a similar word used in some Scandanavian stories that he may have recalled subconsciously.
misspell
Specifically hobbit-hole is the common word for them but Tolkien also calls them smials. JRR Tolkien explains it in the Prologue Concering Hobbits of The Fellowship of the Ring and Appendix F On Translations in The Return of the King. It's a word he invented based on an Old English word. In the world Tolkien has created, the word is translated to English by Tolkien so we can understand it. The Hobbitish word he translated is tran which is related to the Rohirric word trahan meaning burrow.
Please proof read the report to be sure you didn't misspell anything.
A misspell of the word "Version"