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Dwarves vs Hobbit - What's the difference?

dwarves | hobbit |

As nouns the difference between dwarves and hobbit

is that dwarves is plural of lang=en while hobbit is a fictional race of small humanoids with shaggy hair and hairy feet.

dwarves

English

Noun

(head)
  • * 1842 , George Webbe Dasent (trans.), The Prose Or Younger Edda Commonly Ascribed to Snorri Sturluson , page 8
  • Then said Þriði: They took also his skull and made thereof heaven and set it up over the earth with four sides, and under each corner they set dwarves : they hight thus Austri, Vestri, Norþri, Suþri.
  • * 1854 , Barclay Pennock (trans.), Rudolph Keyser, The Religion of the Northmen , page 299
  • The belief in Dwarves as inhabitants of the interior of the earth and especially of large isolated rocks, was likewise a direct offshoot of the Asa-Mythology.
  • * 2001 , Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman, Well of Darkness'', HarperCollins''Publishers , page 139
  • When the human magi arrived, Dunner was the dwarf responsible for arbitrating between them and the dwarves as to location and the hundreds of other minor quibbles that seemed likely to turn into major battles, owing to simple misunderstandings of each other's ways.

    hobbit

    English

    (Encyclopedic etymology) (wikipedia hobbit)

    Etymology 1

    The word hobbit has an unknown origin. However, as designating a diminutive legendary creature, it fits seamlessly into a category of English words in hob- for such beings. The Middle English word hobbe has manifested in many creatures of folklore as the prefix hob-. Related words are : hob, hobby, hobgoblin, Hobberdy Dick, Hobberdy, Hobbaty, hobbidy, Hobley, hobbledehoy, hobble, hobi, hobyn (small horse), hobby horse (perhaps from Hobin), Hobin (variant of the name Robin), Hobby (nickname for Robert), hobyah, Hob Lantern. The only source known today that makes reference to hobbits in any sort of historical context is the Denham Tracts by Michael Aislabie Denham. More specifically, it appears in the Denham Tracts, edited by James Hardy, (London: Folklore Society, 1895), vol. 2, the second part of a two-volume set compiled from Denham's publications between 1846 and 1859. The text contains a long list of sprites and bogies, based on an older list, the Discovery of Witchcraft, dated 1584, with many additions and a few repetitions. The term hobbit is listed in the context of boggleboes, bogies, redmen, portunes, grants, hobbits, hobgoblins, brown-men, cowies, dunnies. The most famous use comes from in 1937, featuring in the novels The Hobbit'' and ''The Lord of the Rings''. Ostensibly from a hypothetical (etyl) ''*holbytla "hole-builder".

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A fictional race of small humanoids with shaggy hair and hairy feet.
  • * 2008 , , Falling Sideways , Orbit books, ISBN 1-84149-110-1, p. 3:
  • It was his thirty-third birthday and already he had a little round tummy like a hobbit
  • An extinct species of hominin, Homo floresiensis , with a short body and relatively small brain, fossils of which have been recovered from the Indonesian island of Flores.
  • * 2007 September 20, Christopher Joyce, “Case Grows for ‘Hobbit’ as Human Ancestor”, All Things Considered , National Public Radio:
  • Although partial remains of other Hobbits have surfaced at the same site, they say it could have been an isolated colony of inbred people who shared the same genetic abnormalities.
  • * 2011 , (Chris Stringer), The Origin of Our Species , Penguin 2012, p. 215:
  • And in the island regions of southeast Asia, where the descendants of erectus , and the Hobbit , and any similar relict populations lived, climate changes would have greatly disrupted connections between regions and populations, as sea levels rose and fell by 100 metres or more.

    See also

    * halfling

    Etymology 2

    Probably from hoppet, hobbet, (a basket).

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A Welsh unit of weight, equal to four Welsh pecks, or 168 pounds
  • (archaic) An old unit of volume (2½ bushels, the volume of 168 pounds of wheat).
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