Sindarin 

-weg

suffix. active in doing

_ adj. suff. _active in doing. >> carweg, madweg, pedweg

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:144] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

-weg

suffix. active in doing

Derivations

  • WEG “live, be active, live, be active; [ᴹ√] (manly) vigour”

Element in

  • S. carweg “active; busy” ✧ PE17/144
  • ᴺS. gladhweg “cheerful, (lit.) apt to laugh”
  • ᴺS. lalweg “cheerful”
  • ᴺS. logweg “meandering, twisting, winding, intricate, (lit.) apt to bend”
  • S. madweg “gluttonous” ✧ PE17/144
  • ᴺS. norweg “often running”
  • S. pedweg “talkative, saying a lot” ✧ PE17/144
  • ᴺS. trastadweg “annoying”

Variations

  • -weg ✧ PE17/144
Sindarin [PE17/144] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-weg

suffix. *name suffix

-i

suffix. adjectival suffix

Derivations

  • -ya “adjectival suffix” ✧ VT42/10

Element in

  • S. serni “shingle, pebble bank” ✧ VT42/10

-on

suffix. masculine suffix

A masculine suffix and ending in male names (PE17/43, 141; WJ/400), probably related to the masculine ending or agental suffix ✶-on(do) (NM/353; Ety/KAL). It becomes -or when following an n (PE17/141).

Conceptual Development: N. -on was often use as a male suffix in the Noldorin of the 1930s and 40s. In Gnomish of the 1910s, it seems G. -os was another common male suffix in words such as G. ainos “(male) god” from neuter G. ain “god” (GL/18) and G. hethos “brother” from neuter G. heth “✱sibling” (GL/48-49), though masculine G. -(r)on was still more common in this early period.

Cognates

  • Q. -ndo “masculine agent”

Derivations

Element in

Variations

  • -on ✧ PE17/141; WJ/387; WJ/400
  • -or ✧ PE17/141
Sindarin [PE17/141; WJ/387; WJ/400] Group: Eldamo. Published by