Tolkien: Legolas carries a bow and arrows, and a long knife. In Lothlórien he is gifted a new bow.
Peter Jackson: In this adaptation he carries two knives instead of one. In Rohan he also makes use of a sword supplied to him.
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This is quite a general question but I'll give it a go:
Mainly swords, spears, Medieval stuff
Sting- Frodo's sword
Anduril- Aragorn's sword (used to be called Narsil)
Glamdring- Gandalf's sword
The same weapons that were used in the Middle Ages: the sword, the bow and arrow and the trebuchet. Also in use were battle axes, maces, spears, and long knives (Famously used by Legolas).
Legolas used an elven bow and a slender white knife [Or in the case of the movie, two knives].
His sword, Andúril.
In Peter Jackson's film adaptation Aragorn carries an unnamed sword, bow and arrows, and Andúril.
He uses a small sword until he goes to Rivendell and gets Bilbo's sword Sting. (who found it in the troll cave in 'The Hobbit')
Weapons in The Hobbit include Glamdring (Gandalf's sword), Ocrist (Thorin's sword), and Sting (Bilbo's sword). Figuratively weapons include wit, luck, and courage.
Neither the book or the movie describe Elrond at having any wepaons at all though im sure he did.
The first ever Lord of the Rings movie was The Lord of the Rings (1978), but of the trilogy starting in 2001, the first movie was called The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring.
Lord of the rings is not based on a true story.
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.
Billy Boyd played Pippin in The Lord Of The Rings.
I don't recall a griffin in Lord of the Rings.