Q. Aia María quanta Eruanno “Hail Mary, full of grace”

Q. Aia María quanta Eruanno “Hail Mary, full of grace”

Aia María [Next Phrase >]


The first line of Aia María, Tolkien’s translation of the Ave Maria prayer. The first word Aia is a variant of aiya “hail”, followed by a Quenyarized form of “Mary”: María. The third word quanta is attested elsewhere with the meaning “full, filled” (PE17/68). The last word Eruanno is a compound of Eru “God” and anna “gift”, in the genitive, so that quanta Eruanno literally means “*full of God’s gift”.

Decomposition: Broken into its constituent elements, this phrase would be:

Aia María quanta Eru-ann(a)-o = “*Hail Mary full God-gift-of”

Conceptual Development: This phrase was quite similar in earlier versions of this prayer, but the earlier versions used erulissenen instead of Eruanno. This word is a compound of Eru “God” and lissë² “grace”, in the instrumental, so that quanta erulissenen literally means “*filled by God’s grace”.

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Aiya Aia
María
quanta erulissenen quanta
erulissenen quanta Eruanno

References ✧ VT43/26-28

Variations

Elements

aiya “hail; behold, lo” ✧ VT43/28; VT43/28 (Aia)
María “*Mary” ✧ VT43/28
quanta “full, filled” ✧ VT43/28
#Eruanna “[God’s] Grace” genitive ✧ VT43/28 (Eruanno)
#Erulissë “[God’s] Grace” instrumental ✧ VT43/29 (erulissenen)

Element In