Question:
what's a hobbit?
tip
2008-04-04 20:39:21 UTC
what's a hobbit?
Six answers:
Cecily A
2008-04-04 20:51:11 UTC
Also known as a Halfling are character created by J.R.R. Tolkien. They can be found in The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings Trilogy (to name a few).



They are small than dwarfs yet much more pleasant. The bottom of their feet is very tough and they have a thick layer of hair that keeps them warm so they do not wear shoes.



They nothing more than minding their own business, dancing, and drinking beer.



They are very pleasant creatures who are not fans of adventure (except of course Bilbo and Frodo!)



For your added details:

~ No Holly Hobbit is not a true hobbit because JRR Tolkein didn't create holly hobbit. He is the one who created the original Hobbits.



~ Grow up. They would do it like every other species. Get a life.
?
2008-04-05 04:04:56 UTC
My dictionary says: In the novels of J. R. R. Tolkien, a member of an imaginary good-natured little people who have brown furry legs and live underground.



Tolkien's most famous hobbits are: Bilbo Baggins, the hero of The Hobbit, and Frodo Baggins, the hero of The Lord of The Rings



Encarta Dictionary Tools
whatever
2008-04-05 03:49:38 UTC
This is my simple definition: "a tiny kind of human-like creature from J.R.R. Tolkiens fantasy world."

The Hobbit, and the Lord of the Rings trilogy (in which hobbits are the main characters), are incredible, one (well, four) of my favorite books ever.
tstx_128
2008-04-05 03:46:58 UTC
They are these little dudes that the guy J.R.R Tolkien wrote about



They're super short and super Hairy



Rent or buy or just watch THE LORD OF THE RINGS... just all three of them... not in one day tho... because they are kinda long



but yea... the hobbits in the books or movies are Frodo, Sam, Merry, and Pippin



so yea... there's ur info
anonymous
2008-04-05 03:46:45 UTC
A little man with hairy feet and a sense of compassion and remorse towards each others. Very isolated creatures who enjoy nothing more than having a good time.



Or so I think...



Muwahahaha.
to love is to live
2008-04-05 03:44:33 UTC
In J. R. R. Tolkien's legendarium, Hobbits are a diminutive race that inhabit the lands of Arda. Known as "Halflings" to most and "Periannath" by the Elves, the word "Hobbit" is derived from the name "Holbytlan" which means "hole-dwellers" in the tongue of the Rohirrim.



According to the author, Hobbits are a "variety"[1] or separate "branch"[2] of the race of Men (Homo sapiens), but they consider themselves a separate race. They live in the Shire and in Bree in northwestern Middle-earth.



Hobbits first appear in the book The Hobbit, and also play a major role in The Lord of the Rings. They are briefly mentioned in The Silmarillion.



In the introduction to The Lord of the Rings Tolkien said that Hobbits are between two and four feet (0.6-1.2 m) tall, the average height being three feet six inches (1 m). They tend toward stoutness and have slightly pointed ears.[3] Tolkien himself describes Hobbits thus:



"I picture a fairly human figure, not a kind of fairy rabbit as some of my British reviewers seem to fancy: fattish in the stomach, shortish in the leg. A round, jovial face; ears only slightly pointed and 'elvish'; hair short and curling (brown). The feet from the ankles down, covered with brown hairy fur that are extremely small. Clothing: green velvet breeches; red or yellow waistcoat; brown or green jacket; gold (or brass) buttons; a dark green hood and cloak (belonging to a dwarf)."[4]

In the Prologue to The Lord of the Rings he wrote that they dress in bright colours, favouring yellow and green. Nowadays (according to Tolkien's fiction), they are very shy creatures, but they are and have been capable of amazing things. They are adept with slings and throwing stones.



Their feet are covered with curly hair (usually brown, as was the hair on their heads) with leathery soles, so most Hobbits hardly ever wear shoes. They are fond of an unadventurous bucolic life of farming, eating, and socializing. Hobbits can sometimes live for up to 130 years, although their average life expectancy is 100 years. The time at which a young Hobbit "comes of age" is 33. Thus a fifty-year-old Hobbit would only be middle-aged.



Hobbits enjoy at least seven meals a day, not including snacks, when they can get them - breakfast, (arguably) second breakfast, elevenses, luncheon, tea, dinner and later, supper. They like simple food such as bread, meat, potatoes, and cheese, have a passion for mushrooms, and also like to drink ale, often in inns — not unlike the English countryfolk, who were Tolkien's inspiration. The name Tolkien chose for one part of Middle-earth where the Hobbits live, "the Shire" is clearly reminiscent of the English Shires. Hobbits also enjoy an ancient variety of tobacco, which they referred to as "pipe-weed", something that can be attributed mostly to their love of gardening and herb-lore.



The Hobbits of the Shire developed the custom of giving away gifts on their birthdays instead of receiving them.[5] They use the term mathom for old and assorted objects, which are invariably given as presents many times over or are stored in a museum (mathom-house).



Some Hobbits live in "hobbit-holes", which were the original places where they dwelt underground. They were found in hillsides, downs, and banks. By the late Third Age, they were replaced by brick and wood houses, however, some older style Hobbit-holes are still in use by more established Shirefolk, such as Bag End and Great Smials. Like all Hobbit architecture, they are notable for their round doors and windows, a feature more practical to tunnel-dwelling that the Hobbits retained in their later structures.



Hobbits (and derivative Halflings in other fantasy settings) are often depicted with large feet for their size, perhaps to visually emphasize their unusualness. This is especially prominent in the influential illustrations by the Brothers Hildebrandt and the large prosthetic feet used in the Peter Jackson films. Tolkien does not actually give size as a generic trait, but makes it the distinctive trait of a hobbit clan, the Proudfoots (or Proudfeet).





[edit] Calendar

The Hobbits had a distinct calendar, every year started on a Saturday and ended on a Friday, with each of the twelve months consisting of thirty days. Some special days did not belong to any month- Yule 1 and 2 (New Years Eve & New Years Day) and three Lithedays in mid summer. Every fourth year there was an extra Litheday.





[edit] Inspiration for the Hobbits

The word and the concept seem to have been inspired by The Marvellous Land of Snergs, a children's book from 1927 by E. A. Wyke-Smith, and by Sinclair Lewis's novel Babbitt (1922). The Snergs were, in Tolkien's words, "a race of people only slightly taller than the average table but broad in the shoulders and of great strength."[6] Tolkien wrote to W. H. Auden that The Marvellous Land of Snergs "was probably an unconscious source-book for the Hobbits, not of anything else", and he told an interviewer that the word hobbit "might have been associated with Sinclair Lewis's Babbitt. Certainly not rabbit, as some people think. Babbitt has the same bourgeois smugness that hobbits do. His world is the same limited place."[7]



However, Tolkien claims that he started writing The Hobbit after suddenly, without premeditation, writing on a blank piece of paper: "In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit"[8]. The misunderstanding of rabbit may have to do with hobbits' disposition to tunnels, and the fact The Hobbit Bilbo is mockingly described several times as a rabbit in the original text.





[edit] Notable hobbits

Bilbo Baggins

Frodo Baggins

Samwise "Sam" Gamgee

Meriadoc "Merry" Brandybuck

Peregrin "Pippin" Took

Fredegar "Fatty" Bolger

Otho, Lobelia and Lotho Sackville-Baggins

The Old Took

Bandobras "Bullroarer" Took

Rosie Cotton

Elanor Gamgee

Sméagol aka Gollum (a Stoorish Hobbit)

Déagol (a Stoorish Hobbit)

Though in The Hobbit it is mentioned that Gandalf "was responsible for so many quiet lads and lasses going off into the Blue for mad adventures," no female Hobbits are depicted in Tolkien's stories explicitly doing so; however Hobbit women do appear in his works, such as the formidable Lobelia Sackville-Baggins. He does say that Bilbo's mother, Belladonna Took, "never had any adventures after she became Mrs. Bungo Baggins", and this might be taken to imply that she had some before.





[edit] History

Historically, the Hobbits are known to have originated in the Valley of Anduin, between Mirkwood and the Misty Mountains. According to The Lord of the Rings, they have lost the genealogical details of how they are related to the rest of mankind. At this time, there were three Hobbit-kinds, with different physical characteristics and temperaments: Harfoots, Stoors and Fallohides. While situated in the valley of the Anduin River, the Hobbits lived close by the Éothéod, the ancestors of the Rohirrim, and this led to some contact between the two. As a result many old words and names in "Hobbitish" are derivatives of words in Rohirric.



The Harfoots, the most numerous, were almost identical to the Hobbits as they are described in The Hobbit. They lived on the lowest slopes of the Misty Mountains and lived in holes, or Smials, dug into the hillsides. The Stoors, the second most numerous, were shorter and stockier and had an affinity for water, boats and swimming. They lived on the marshy Gladden Fields where the Gladden River met the Anduin (there is a similarity here to the hobbits of Buckland and the Marish in the Shire. It is possible that those hobbits were the descendants of Stoors). The Fallohides, the least numerous, were an adventurous people that preferred to live in the woods under the Misty Mountains and were said to be taller and fairer (all of these traits were much rarer in later days, and it has been implied that wealthy, eccentric families that tended to lead other hobbits politically, like the Tooks and Brandybucks, were of Fallohide descent).



About the year T.A. 1050, they undertook the arduous task of crossing the Misty Mountains. Reasons for this trek are unknown, but they possibly had to do with Sauron's growing power in nearby Greenwood, which was later named Mirkwood because of the shadow that fell on it as Sauron searched the area for the One Ring. The Hobbits took different routes in their journey westward, but as they began to settle together in Bree-land, Dunland, and the Angle formed by the rivers Mitheithel and Bruinen, the divisions between the Hobbit-kinds began to blur.



In the year 1601 of the Third Age (year 1 in the Shire Reckoning), two Fallohide brothers named Marcho and Blanco gained permission from the King of Arnor at Fornost to cross the River Brandywine and settle on the other side. Many Hobbits followed them, and most of the territory they had settled in the Third Age was abandoned. Only Bree and a few surrounding villages lasted to the end of the Third Age. The new land that they founded on the west bank of the Brandywine was called the Shire.



A map of the Shire and surrounding regions may be found at Eriador.



Originally the Hobbits of the Shire swore nominal allegiance to the last Kings of Arnor, being required only to acknowledge their lordship, speed their messengers, and keep the bridges and roads in repair. During the final fight against Angmar at the Battle of Fornost, the Hobbits maintain that they sent a company of archers to help but this is nowhere else recorded. After the battle, the kingdom of Arnor was destroyed, and in absence of the king, the Hobbits elected a Thain of the Shire from among their own chieftains.



The first Thai


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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