(i vellas), pl. bellais (i mellais) if there is a pl.
Adûnaic
abâr
noun. strength, endurance, fidelity
abâr
noun. strength, endurance, fidelity
bellas
noun. bodily strength
bellas
bodily strength
(i vellas), pl. bellais (i mellais) if there is a pl.
tû
strength
(physical strength) tû (i dû, o thû) (muscle, sinew; vigour), pl. tui (i thui), coll. pl. túath.
tû
strength
(i dû, o thû) (muscle, sinew; vigour), pl. t**ui (i thui), coll. pl. túath**.
Beware, older languages below! The languages below were invented during Tolkien's earlier period and should be used with caution. Remember to never, ever mix words from different languages!
rhôg
noun. strength
A noun for “strength” in Early Noldorin Word-lists of the 1920s (PE13/152).
Conceptual Development: G. rôg “doughty, strong” appeared in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s, along with an unglossed word rog with short o (GL/65).
nertu
noun. strength
A noun for “strength” appearing in the Qenya Lexicon and Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa of the 1910s, derived from the early root ᴱ√NERE, whose derivatives mostly had to do with men and manliness (QL/65; PME/65).
bel
noun. strength
An Ilkorin word for “strength”, developed from primitive ᴹ✶belē (Ety/BEL), an example of how final vowels vanished in Ilkorin.
belle
noun. strength
belē
noun. strength
tū
noun. strength
A noun translated as “strength, endurance, fidelity”, and used as an example of noun declension in Lowdham’s Report (SD/431). Carl Hostetter and Patrick Wynne suggested (AAD/9) that it may be related to the Elvish root ᴹ√BOR(ON) “endure”. It may also be related to the name Abrazân “✱Steadfast, Faithful”.
Conceptual Development: This word also appeared in earlier Adûnaic names Zen’nabâr and Abarzâyan (both glossed “Land of Gift”), where it apparently had the meaning “gift”. These names were eventually replaced by Yôzâyan in which the element yô means “gift”, freeing abâr to have the meaning: “strength, endurance, fidelity”.