
Mithril
Mithril · True Silver — A Legendary Metal Light as a Feather, Harder Than Steel
Mithril (English Mithril, Sindarin mith + ril) is the true-silver (true-silver) of the decisive canon — feather-light, harder than steel, the legendary metal — derived from Sindarin 'mith (grey)' and 'ril (brilliance)' — the decisive canonical vocabulary — the decisive canon of J.R.R. Tolkien's coinage. Aliases — Mithril (Mithril), true-silver, Moria-silver, true silver, grey brilliance — are the decisive canonical vocabulary. The decisive Tolkien canon is the decisive canon of the English J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings (The Lord of the Rings) of 1954-1955. The decisive Moria canon is the decisive canon of the mines of Khazad-dûm (Khazad-dûm, Moria). The decisive Frodo canon is the decisive canon of Bilbo's mithril coat.
Origin
The etymological origin is the decisive canonical vocabulary of 'mithril', a compound of Sindarin 'mith (grey)' and 'ril (brilliance, sparkle)' — the decisive canon of Tolkien's coined language — and the decisive canon of the aliases 'true-silver' and 'Moria-silver' in English. The decisive Tolkien canon is the decisive canon of the English J.R.R. Tolkien's (John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, 1892-1973) The Lord of the Rings (The Lord of the Rings) — the decisive canon of mithril — of 29 July 1954 (Part 1), 11 November 1954 (Part 2), and 20 October 1955 (Part 3). The decisive Moria canon is the decisive canon of 'mined only from the underground mines of the Misty Mountains' of Khazad-dûm (Khazad-dûm, 'Dwarrowdelf' in Khuzdul, Sindarin Moria 'black pit') — the decisive canon of Book 2 Chapter 4 of Tolkien's The Fellowship of the Ring (The Fellowship of the Ring). The decisive Frodo canon is the decisive canon of 'Bilbo (Bilbo) gives Frodo (Frodo) a coat of mithril mail (worth more than all the value of the Shire)' in Book 2 Chapter 4 of The Fellowship of the Ring, and the decisive canon of saving Frodo from the attack of the Balrog of Moria in The Two Towers (The Two Towers).
Features
- True-silver — feather-light, harder than steel metal
- Main axis — 1954-1955 Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings decisive canon
- Sindarin mith (grey) + ril (brilliance)
- Mines of Khazad-dûm (Moria) under the Misty Mountains
- Decisive canon of Frodo's mithril coat from Bilbo
- Synonym of the highest-grade metal in modern fantasy
Stories
Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings of 1954-1955 is the decisive Tolkien canon, and the mines of Khazad-dûm are the decisive Moria canon. The decisive canon used as a coat of true-silver, and the decisive canon invoked as the highest-grade metal in modern fantasy. The decisive Frodo canon is the decisive canon of Bilbo's mithril coat, and the decisive D&D canon is the decisive canon of mithril in Dungeons & Dragons of 1974. The decisive 21st-century canon is the decisive canon of Peter Jackson's films of 2001 and the games of the 21st century.
Weakness
Mithril's weaknesses are: (1) Tolkien's coinage — the decisive canonical weakness — the decisive canon of being a fictional metal coined by Tolkien; (2) binding of Khazad-dûm — the decisive canon of being mined only in the mines of Moria; (3) binding of Balrog — the decisive canon of the discovery of mithril awakening the Balrog; (4) binding of non-existence — the decisive canon of not actually existing; (5) binding of Sindarin — the decisive canon of the binding of the Elven language; (6) binding of the sacred domain — the decisive canon; (7) binding of Bilbo — the decisive canon of the binding of the value of the Shire; (8) binding of time — the decisive canon of the binding of 1954 Tolkien. The decisive canonical finale is the decisive mythological canon of D&D of 1974 and fantasy of the 21st century.
Cultural Significance
Mithril is not merely a metal icon but the canonical iconographic figure of the decisive Tolkien-D&D-modern fantasy canon, traversing Tolkien's The Hobbit (The Hobbit) of 1937, the mines of mithril of Khazad-dûm in Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings of 1954-1955, Bilbo's mithril coat to Frodo, the Balrog attack of Moria in The Two Towers, Frodo's survival in The Return of the King, mithral in D&D of 1974, Tolkien's The Silmarillion of 1977, Peter Jackson's films of 2001, and the games of Japan of the 21st century. The etymological origin settled as the decisive canon of 'mithril', a compound of Sindarin 'mith (grey)' and 'ril (brilliance)' — the decisive canon of Tolkien's coined language. The decisive Tolkien canon is the decisive canon of the English J.R.R. Tolkien's (John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, born 3 January 1892, died 2 September 1973) The Hobbit (The Hobbit) of 21 September 1937 — the first appearance is the decisive canon of Thror's mithril coat of mail, and the decisive canon of The Lord of the Rings of 29 July 1954 (The Fellowship of the Ring), 11 November 1954 (The Two Towers), and 20 October 1955 (The Return of the King). The decisive Moria canon is the decisive canon of Khazad-dûm (Khazad-dûm, 'Dwarrowdelf' in Khuzdul, Sindarin Moria 'black pit') — 'mined only from the underground mines of the Misty Mountains, with a value 10 times that of gold', and the decisive canon of 'the mining of mithril went too deep and awakened the Balrog'. The decisive Frodo canon is the decisive canon of 'Bilbo (Bilbo) gives Frodo (Frodo) a coat of mithril mail (worth more than all the value of the Shire)' in Book 2 Chapter 4 of The Fellowship of the Ring, and the decisive canon of 'in The Two Towers, mithril saves Frodo's life from the spear attack of the cave-troll of the Balrog of Moria'. The decisive D&D canon is the decisive canon of mithral (mithral, D&D spelling) in the American Gary Gygax's (Gary Gygax) Dungeons & Dragons (Dungeons & Dragons) of 1974, and the decisive 21st-century canon is the decisive canon of the New Zealand Peter Jackson's (Peter Jackson) The Lord of the Rings films of 2001-2003, and the games and manga of Japan of the 21st century.
In Popular Culture
Tolkien (J.R.R. Tolkien) The Hobbit (The Hobbit) Thror's mithril coat of mail (1937) — decisive Hobbit canonTolkien (J.R.R. Tolkien) The Lord of the Rings (The Lord of the Rings) mithril of Khazad-dûm (1954-1955) — decisive Tolkien canonBilbo's mithril coat of mail to Frodo — decisive Frodo canonFrodo's survival from the Balrog attack of Moria — decisive Moria canonTolkien (J.R.R. Tolkien) The Silmarillion (The Silmarillion) (1977) — decisive Silmarillion canonMithral (mithral) in Gary Gygax's (Gary Gygax) Dungeons & Dragons (Dungeons & Dragons) (1974) — decisive D&D canonPeter Jackson's (Peter Jackson) The Lord of the Rings films (2001-2003) — decisive film canonMithril of The Witcher (The Witcher) series — decisive Witcher canonMithril of World of Warcraft (World of Warcraft) — decisive gaming canonMithril of The Elder Scrolls (The Elder Scrolls) series — decisive gaming canon
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