Analysis of the Ring Verse inscription1), some geographical and personal names gives us such distinct features as:
If the Alexandre Nemirovsky's hypothesis about connection between Black Speech and Hurrian languages is right then we can assume following things to be typical for early Black Speech:
But the significant feature of Hurrian language is Ergative alignment with SOV (Subject–Object–Verb) sentence structure, which has no evidence in known Tolkien's material.
Nûrlâm is considered to exist in time between Classical Black Speech and orcish dialects (Svartiska, Shadowlandian, etc.), and following changes occurred in it:
However some hypothetical features of Classical Black Speech are used for archaic style of Nûrlâm.
Taking in account rules of other dialects, their real use and common mistakes, modern Black Speech has tendency to copy English grammar and syntax:
Nûrlâm dialect supports these tendencies too but considers them as colloquial or dialectical.
Below is the comparison chart of some influential Neo Black Speech dialects with Nûrlâm and Tolkien's Black Speech according to their timeline in Middle-Earth history.
Feature | Dialects | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tolkien's Classical Black Speech2) | Neo-Black Speech | Tolkien's Debased Black Speech3) |
|||||
Zhâburi B | Standard Nûrlâm | Svartiska | Shadowlandian | Colloquial Nûrlâm | |||
Syntactical alignment | ? | ergative | nominative-accusative | ||||
Subject, object and verb's word order | ? | SOV | SVO | ||||
Determiner's word order (adjectives, numerals) (before/after noun) | before (except compound words) | before | before (except compound words) | vary | after | before (except compound words) |
Feature | Dialects | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tolkien's Classical Black Speech4) | Neo-Black Speech | Tolkien's Debased Black Speech5) |
|||||
Zhâburi B | Standard Nûrlâm | Svartiska | Shadowlandian | Colloquial Nûrlâm | |||
Animacy | no | no | affects 3rd person pronouns | ? | affects 3rd person pronouns and noun's plural form | affects 3rd person pronouns | probably |
3rd person pronoun gender | no | no | no | yes (f, m, n) | yes (common / feminine) | (f, m, n) only for standalone pronouns | probably |
Gender modifier | ? | no | yes (-niz) | ? | yes (-lob) | yes (-niz) | not attested |
Number | no | no | for all verbs and 3rd person pronouns | all | |||
Declension classes | ? | 3 6) | 2 | ? | |||
Cases | many | 8 | 14, accusative = nominative for nouns | 7 (3 – 4 in colloquial speech) | many or 6 (with accusative = nominative for nouns) depending on treatment | nominative, possessive and objective only for pronouns | no |
Postpositions | yes | yes | ~2/3 | few | yes | few | no |
Prepositions | no | no | ~1/3 | yes | few | yes | yes |
Feature | Dialects | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tolkien's Classical Black Speech7) | Neo-Black Speech | Tolkien's Debased Black Speech8) |
|||||
Zhâburi B | Standard Nûrlâm | Svartiska | Shadowlandian | Colloquial Nûrlâm | |||
Typology | |||||||
Agglutinative | highly | highly | highly | optionally | highly | optionally | no |
Polysynthetic | yes | yes | yes | word derivation | yes | no | no |
Fusional | no | ? | little | little | due to sound merging | no | no |
Analytical | no | no | little | optionally | some | optionally | highly |
Morphology | |||||||
Suffixes | yes | rare | |||||
Prefixes | yes9) | rare | yes | (very) possible | |||
Clitics | yes | rare |
Feature | Dialects | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tolkien's Classical Black Speech10) | Neo-Black Speech | Tolkien's Debased Black Speech11) |
|||||
Zhâburi B | Standard Nûrlâm | Svartiska | Shadowlandian | Colloquial Nûrlâm | |||
a, i, u | yes | ||||||
o | rare | quite frequent | |||||
e | no | in borrowed words | no | yes | Svartiska borrowings | no | probably rare |
p, b, t, d, th, s, z, sh, k, g, gh, m, n, f, h, l, r | yes | ||||||
dh, zh, kh (ch), ng | not attested | yes | yes | kh, others probably | |||
v | not attested | yes | no | yes | no | no | not attested |
j, y | not attested | no | rare | yes | rare | rare | rare |
qu | no | yes, Quenya borrowings | no | no |
While small corpus of Classical Black Speech contains at least two words from Valarin, a mother-tongue of Sauron who was the author of Black Speech, it has also words from various languages of Elves. As it's believed that orcs were made from captured, tortured and corrupted elves (at least until greater Uruk-hai were bred), Elvish influence on languages is obviously natural. So if we group languages or Arda into groups and families as for real ones, Black Speech will definitely belong to Elvish family.
Orcs used Common Speech (Westron) in communication between different breeds and tribes as it stated in LOTR, but no traces of it found in Debased Black Speech, which still has a lot of elvish words.
Angband Orcish of 1st Age appeared before Sauron created Black Speech, and it was almost entirely a corrupted version of Sindarin or more closely it's earlier version (in real-word terms) called Noldorin.
Neo-Black Speech dialects continue to actively borrow words from various elvish languages, however larger part of their Lexicon consists of unique words.