Quenya 

norno

noun. Dwarf

A word for a Dwarf (WJ/388), a personalized form of the adjective norna “stiff, tough” (WJ/413), patterned after S. dorn.

Quenya [WJ/388; WJ/413; WJI/Norno] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Casar

dwarf

Casar ("k")noun "Dwarf", pl. Casari or Casári, partitive plural Casalli. Adapted from Dwarvish Khazâd. Casarrondo place-name "Khazad-dûm", Moria (WJ:388, 389; pl. Casári also in WJ:402)

Nauco

dwarf

Nauco ("k")noun "Dwarf" (capitalized in WJ:388, but not in Etym, stem NAUK). Naucalië (not *Naucolië) the "Dwarf-people" as a whole. Nauco is a personalized form of the adjective nauca "stunted" (itself sometimes used as a noun "dwarf"); pl. naucor (PE17:45). See also Picinaucor.

Naucon

dwarf

Naucon (Naucond-, as in the pl. Naucondi) noun "dwarf", variant of Nauco (PE17:45; not capitalized in the source)

norno

dwarf

Norno (2) noun "dwarf"; a personalized form of the adjective norna(WJ:413); Nornalië (not *Nornolië) the "Dwarf-people" as a whole (WJ:388)

casar

noun. Dwarf

Quenya [PE17/045; WJ/388; WJI/Kasari; WJI/Khazâd] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nauco

noun. dwarf

Quenya [PE17/045; WJ/388; WJI/Nauko] Group: Eldamo. Published by

naucon

noun. Dwarf

casallië

proper name. *Dwarf-folk

A term for the Dwarves as a race (WJ/388), a compound of Casar “Dwarf” and lië “people”, with the r assimilated to l.

Quenya [WJ/388; WJI/Kasari] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nuxo

petty dwarf

nuxo noun "Petty dwarf" (PE17:45; the spellings "nukso" and "nuxo" both occur in the source). Elsewhere the Petty-dwarves are called Picinaucor or Pitya-naucor, q.v.

návatar

masculine name. *Dwarf-father

A name for Aulë as father of the dwarves (PM/391). The second element is clearly atar “father”, but the meaning of the initial element is more difficult to determine. It might be a prefixal form Nau- of nauco “Dwarf”, or it could the word náva “hollow” associated with Dwarves via the name Návarot.

Quenya [PM/391; PMI/Návatar] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nauca

adjective. stunted, shortened, dwarf(ed)

Quenya [PE17/045; VT39/07; WJ/413] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nuxo

noun. Petty dwarf

nér

noun. man, male person (of any kindred: elf, human or dwarf), man, male person; [ᴹQ.] adult male; [ᴱQ.] husband; warrior

The Quenya word for a “man”, or more specifically a person of male gender of any kindred (WJ/393; PE23/87). This word is derived from the root √N(D)ER, and the é is long in Quenya as a remnant of the lengthened vowel in the primitive subjective form ndēr, but the stem form is ner- because the vowel was not long in ancient inflective forms (PE19/102). Thus the singular is nér but the plural is neri (MR/213), and likewise for other inflected forms. Nér can be used regardless of species and so is equally applicable to male Elves, Men, or Dwarves, but is unlikely to be used of male animals, for which the word [ᴹQ.] hanu is more applicable.

Conceptual Development: This word was very well established in Tolkien’s mind, appearing as ᴱQ. ner “man, husband” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s under the early root ᴱ√NERE (QL/65), though in the contemporaneous Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa it was glossed “warrior, etc.” (PME/65). The long/short vowel variation had emerged by the time the Early Qenya Grammar was written in the 1920s, where Tolkien gave singular nēr but plural nĕri (PE14/43, 72).

The Declension of Nouns from the early 1930s has this same long/short vowel split (PE21/20) as does The Etymologies from later in the 1930s which had ᴹQ. nér with plural neri as derivatives of the root ᴹ√(N)DER (Ety/DER). This remained the case in later writings as well, except that the unstrengthened form of the root changed from ᴹ√DER to √NER (WJ/393), though this only barely matters, since the actual derivatives were all from strengthened √NDER in pretty much all cases from the 1930s forward.

Quenya [MR/213; MR/226; MR/229; MR/471; UT/211; UT/229; VT49/17; WJ/393] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nís

noun. woman (of any kindred: elf, human or dwarf)

The usual Quenya word for “woman” or more exactly a “female person” of any kindred (PE23/87), in later writings appearing as both nís (MR/213, 226, 229) and nisse (VT47/18, 33). Even in the cases where its singular was nís, its plural form was given as nissi, indicating a stem form of niss-. In rough notes from 1968 Tolkien said “The monosyllabic nouns (especially those with only one stem-consonant) were a small dwindling class often replaced by strengthened forms (as nis- was [by] nisse)” (VT47/18).

Thus it seems the ancient form was ✱nis- from the root √NIS, which like its male counterpart Q. nér “man” inherited a long vowel from the ancient subjective form ✱nīs. But the voiceless s was felt to be intrinsic to word, and it was thus strengthened to niss- in inflected forms to avoid the sound changes associated with an isolated s. From this a longer form nisse was generalized. In practice I think either form can be used, with singular nís being preserved by analogy with nér. However, I think inflected forms are probably all based on nisse, such as genitive nisseo “of a woman” rather than ✱✱nisso.

Conceptual Development: In The Etymologies of the 1930s Tolkien had both ᴹQ. nis and nisse “woman” derived from the root ᴹ√NIS, with plural nissi in both cases (Ety/NIS, NDIS). He explained this variation as follows: “nis was a blend of old nīs (nisen) and the elab[orated] form ✱nis-sē” (EtyAC/Nι). Hence it is was essentially the same as the scenario described above, but in the 1930s the long vowel in ancient nīs did not survive in the later short form nis. Quenya Personal Pronouns (QPP1) from the late 1940s had nís “woman” with a long í (PE23/85).

In Quenya prayers of the 1950s, Tolkien experimented with some alternate plural forms nínaron [genitive plural] >> nísi [ordinary plural] (VT43/26-29, 31), the former apparently representing a variant singular form ✱nína, but in later writings plural nissi was restored.

Quenya [MR/213; MR/226; MR/229; MR/471; VT43/31; VT47/18; VT47/33] Group: Eldamo. Published by

herunauco

9V7J5.DaH noun. dwarf-lord, dwarven lord

Quenya [Compound of heru and nauco] Group: Neologism. Published by

-li

the elves

-li partitive pl. ending (simply called a plural suffix in the Etymologies, stem LI). The ending is used to indicate a plural that is neither generic (e.g. Eldar "the Elves" as a race) nor definite (preceded by article); hence Eldali is used for "some Elves" (a particular group of Elves, when they are first mentioned in a narrative, VT49:8). Sometimes Tolkien also lets -li imply a great number; in PE17:129, the form falmalinnar from _Namárië _is broken down as falma-li-nnar "foam wave-many-towards-pl. ending", and falmali by itself Tolkien translated "many waves" (PE17:73). A distinct accusative in -seems to occur in the phrase an i falmalī (PE17:127, apparently meaning the same as i falmalinnar, but replacing the allative ending with a preposition). Genitive -lion in vanimálion, malinornélion (q.v. for reference), allative -linna and -linnar in falmalinnar, q.v. The endings for other cases are only known from the Plotz letter: possessive -líva, dative -lin, locative -lissë or -lissen, ablative -lillo or -lillon, instrumental -línen, "short locative" -lis. When the noun ends in a consonant, r and n is assimilated before l, e.g. Casalli as the partitive pl. of Casar "Dwarf" (WJ:402), or elelli as the partitive pl. of elen "star" (PE17:127). It is unclear whether the same happens in monosyllabic words, or whether a connecting vowel would be slipped in before -li (e.g. ?queneli or ?quelli as the partitive pl. of quén, quen- "person").

Návatar

father

Návatar noun a title of Aulë referring to his position as the immediate author of the Dwarvish race, apparently including atar "father", but the first element cannot be related to any known term for "Dwarf" (PM:391 cf. 381)

nauca

stunted

nauca ("k")adj. "stunted" (VT39:7), "stunted, shortened, dwarf(ed)" (PE17:45), especially applied to things that though in themselves full-grown were smaller or shorter than their kind, and were hard, twisted or ill-shapen (WJ:413). The word can also be used as a noun "dwarf" (PE17:45), the meaning it also had in Tolkiens early "Qenya" (LT1:261), but the distinct noun-form Nauco may be more usual.

atar

noun. father

The Quenya word for “father”, derived from the root √AT(AR) (PM/324; WJ/402; VT48/19).

Conceptual Development: ᴱQ. atar “father” dates all the way back to the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, though in that document it was “a more solemn word ... usually to 1st Person of the Blessed Trinity”, as opposed to more ordinary ᴱQ. attu “father” (QL/33). In the English-Qenya Dictionary of the 1920s, ᴱQ. atar was the ordinary word for “father”, but with variant archaic form †attar (PE15/72). ᴹQ. atar “father” reappeared in The Etymologies of the 1930s as a derivative of the root ᴹ√ATA of the same meaning (Ety/ATA). It appeared again in the Quenya Verbal System (QVS) from 1948 in various inflected forms (PE22/118-119). It continued to appear regularly in Tolkien’s later writings. Thus this word was established early and retained its form throughout Tolkien’s life with only minor variations.

Quenya [PM/324; SA/atar; UT/186; UT/193; UT/273; VT43/13; VT43/37; VT44/16; VT47/26; WJ/402] Group: Eldamo. Published by

návarot

place name. Hollowbold

The Quenya translation of Kh. Tumunzahar “Hollowbold” (WJ/389). It is a compound of náva “hollow” and rotto “cave, tunnel”.

Malantur

lord, ruler

Malantur, masc. name. Apparently includes -(n)tur "lord, ruler". The initial element is unlikely to connect with the early "Qenya" element mala- "hurt, pain", and may rather reflect the root MALAT "gold" (PM:366): Malat-ntur > Malantur "Gold-ruler"? (UT:210)

Návarot

nogrod

Návarot noun "Nogrod" (< Novrod), Hollowbold, name of a dwelling of the Dwarves (WJ:389). If the element that is here translated náva is the same as náva "mouth", the initial n comes from earlier ng (ñ) and should be represented by the letter noldo rather than númen in Tengwar writing. However, Tolkien in WJ:414 reconstructs the primitive form of the náva in Návarot as ¤_nābā _rather than ngābā or ngāwā (the likely source of náva "mouth"), so this appears doubtful. The initial n of Návarot should evidently be represented by the letter númen in Tengwar writing.

atar

father

atar noun "father" (SA; WJ:402, UT:193, LT1:255, VT43:37, VT44:12). According to the Etymologies (ATA) the pl. is atari, but contrast #atári in Atanatári "Fathers of Men" (q.v.); possibly the word behaves differently when compounded. Atarinya "my father" (LR:70), atar(inya) the form a child would use addressing his or her father, also reduced to atya (VT47:26). Diminutive masc. name Atarincë ("k") "Little father", amilessë (never used in narrative) of Curufinwë = Curufin (PM:353). Átaremma, Ataremma "our Father" as the first word of the Quenya translation of the Lord's Prayer, written before Tolkien changed -mm- as the marker of 1st person pl. exclusive to -lm-; notice -e- as a connecting vowel before the ending -mma "our". In some versions of the Lord's Prayer, including the final version, the initial a of atar "father" is lengthened, producing #átar. This may be a contraction of *a atar "o Father", or the vowel may be lengthened to give special emphasis to #Átar "Father" as a religious title (VT43:13). However, in VT44:12 Atar is also a vocative form referring to God, and yet the initial vowel remains short.

atar

noun. father

Quenya [PE 22:118] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

atto

father, daddy

atto noun "father, daddy" (hypocoristic)(ATA, LR:49), supposedly a word in "actual 'family' use" (VT47:26), also used in children's play for "thumb" and "big toe" (VT47:10, 26, VT48:4, 6). The dual form attat listed in VT48:19 seems to be formed from the alternative form atta, though attat was changed by Tolkien from attot. - Compare atya.

condo

noun. lord

heru

lord, master

heru (also hér) noun "lord, master" (PM:210, KHER, LT1:272, VT44:12); Letters:283 gives hér (heru); the form Héru with a long vowel refers to God in the source where it appears (i Héru "the Lord", VT43:29). In names like Herumor "Black Lord" and Herunúmen "Lord of the West" (SA:heru). The form heruion is evidently a gen.pl. of heru "lord": "of the lords" (SD:290); herunúmen "Lord-of-West" (LR:47), title of Manwë. Pl. númeheruvi "Lords-of-West" (*"West-lords") in SD:246, a title of the Valar; does this form suggest that #heruvi is the regular plural of heru?

hér

lord

hér noun "lord" (VT41:9), also heru, q.v.

hér

noun. lord

sarda

hard

sarda adj. "hard" (VT39:17); pl. sardë "hards" may be used in the same sense as sarda tengwi, q.v. (As an independent form we would rather expect a nominal pl. sardar.)

tele

verb. mean, intend

Quenya [PE 22:99n,118] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

torna

hard

#torna adj. "hard", as in tornanga (q.v.), seemingly -storna after prefixes ending in a vowel, as in the comparative forms aristorna, anastorna (PE17:56; the forms are untranslated and may not necessarily be the same adjective "hard".)

torna

adjective. hard

túrin

noun. lord

Quenya [Minor-Doc/1973-05-30] Group: Eldamo. Published by

urda

hard, difficult, arduous

urda adj. "hard, difficult, arduous" (PE17:154)

Sindarin 

dern

Dwarf

pl2. dernlir n. Dwarf. >> gorn

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:46] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

gorn

Dwarf

pl2. gornhoth** ** n. Dwarf (hostile implication). >> dern

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:46] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

nogon

dwarf

pl1. nogoth, pl2. nogothrim, naugrim** _ n. _dwarf. _fennas nogothrim lasto beth lammen _'doorway of the Dwarf-folk listen to the words of my tongue'. Tolkien first glosed nogoth as 'a dwarf'. [**PE17:45-6] >> noegin, nogoth

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

naug

noun. dwarf

_ n. _dwarf. [PE17:46] >> cadhad, nogon, nogoth

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

cadhad

noun. dwarf

Sindarin [PE17/045] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hadhod

noun. Dwarf

Sindarin [SA/hadhod; WJ/388; WJ/414; WJI/Hadhod; WJI/Khazâd] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hadhod

noun. Dwarf

Sindarin [WJ/388, WJ/414] Kh khazâd. Group: SINDICT. Published by

niben-nog

proper name. Petty Dwarf

A Sindarin term for a Petty Dwarf (PE17/46), a variation on the better known Nogoth Niben, a combination of niben “petty” and a suffixal form -nog of naug “dwarf”, because [[s|[au] became [o] in polysyllables]] in Sindarin. This term was first published in its plural forms Nibin-noeg (UT/100) and Nibin-nogrim “Petty-dwarves” (UT/148). Tolkien considered numerous variations on the singular form of this name (WJ/187, note #26).

Sindarin [PE17/046; UT/100; UT/148; UTI/Nibin-noeg; WJ/420; WJI/Naugrim; WJI/Nibin-noeg] Group: Eldamo. Published by

noged

noun. Petty Dwarf

This entry includes several experimental Sindarin names for Petty Dwarves from later writings (PE17/45-6, WJ/187). They all have the initial element naug “dwarf” or older variant N. Nawag, and various diminutives as final elements.

Sindarin [PE17/045; PE17/046; WJI/Neweg; WJI/Nognith] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nogoth niben

proper name. Petty Dwarf

A Sindarin term for a Petty Dwarf (WJ/388), first published in its plural forms Noegyth Nibin “Petty-dwarves” (S/204). This name is a combination of Nogoth “Dwarf” and niben “petty” (WJ/388).

Sindarin [S/204; SA/naug; SI/Noegyth Nibin; SI/Petty-dwarves; UT/148; UTI/Noegyth Nibin; WJ/388; WJ/408; WJI/Nogoth] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nogrod

place name. Hollowbold; (lit.) Hollow-delving, (later) Dwarf-delving

A Dwarven city in the Blue Mountains translated “Hollowbold” (S/91) or “Dwarrowdelf” (WJ/209). Originally, this name was North Sindarin (NS.) Novrod, a translation of Khuzdul Tumunzahar “Hollowbold”, but its initial element NS. nôf fell out of common use and the name was reformed as Nogrod (WJ/209, 389, 414). The reformed name was reinterpreted as a combination of S. naug “dwarf” and grod “delving”, hence: “Dwarrowdelf” or “Dwarf-delving” (SA/naug, groth).

Conceptual Development: The name G. Nogrod appeared in the earliest Lost Tales (LT2/224) and N. Nogrod was translated “Dwarfmine” in Silmarillion drafts from the 1930s (LR/274). In The Etymologies it was translated “Dwarf-city” and given as a combination of N. naug “dwarf” and the root ᴹ√ROD or ᴹ√ROT “cave” (Ety/NAUK, EtyAC/NAUK). The more elaborate etymology given above was developed in conjunction with the Silmarillion revisions from the 1950s-60s (WJ/209, 389, 414).

Sindarin [LotRI/Nogrod; PMI/Nogrod; S/091; SA/groth; SA/naug; SI/Hollowbold; SI/Nogrod; TII/Nogrod; UTI/Nogrod; WJ/209; WJ/389; WJ/414; WJI/Nogrod; WJI/Novrod; WJI/Tumunzahar] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Nogrod

noun. dwarf dwelling

naug (“dwarf”) + grod (“delving, underground dwelling”) Late substitution for Novrod (“hollow underground dwelling”) < nov (AS “hollow”) + grod (“excavation, underground dwelling”), which “retains the older Eldarin order with the adjectival element first”.

Sindarin [Tolkiendil] Group: Tolkiendil Compound Sindarin Names. Published by

men-i-naugrim

place name. Dwarf Road, (lit.) Way of the Dwarves

The road through Mirkwood, glossed “Dwarf Road” (UT/280-281) and translated more literally “Way of the Dwarves” by Christoper Tolkien (UTI/Men-i-Naugrim). It is a combination of men “way”, i “the” and Naugrim “Dwarves”.

Sindarin [NM/372; UT/280; UT/281; UTI/Men-i-Naugrim] Group: Eldamo. Published by

niben-nog

noun. Petty dwarf

_ n. _Petty dwarf. [PE17:46] >> cadhad, noged, nogon, nogoth

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

noegin

noun. little dwarf

_ n. _little dwarf. [PE17:45] >> cadhad, nogon, nogoth

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

noged

Petty dwarf

pl1. nœgid _ n. _Petty dwarf. [PE17:46] >> cadhad, nogon, nogoth

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

nogoth

big Dwarf

pl1. negyth, pl2. naugrim, nogrim, nogothrim, nogothlir _ n. _big Dwarf, dwarf. [PE17:45-6] >> cadhad, noegin, nogon

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus)] < _naugoth_. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

dorn

noun/adjective. tough, stiff, thrawn, obdurate; Dwarf

Sindarin [PE17/181; WJ/388; WJ/408; WJ/413; WJI/Dornhoth] Group: Eldamo. Published by

fennas nogothrim, lasto beth lammen

doorway of the Dwarf-folk listen to the word of my tongue

Sindarin [LotR/0307; PE17/045; RGEO/67] Group: Eldamo. Published by

naug

noun. dwarf; dwarf(ed), stunted

Sindarin [PE17/045; PE17/046; SA/groth; SA/naug; UT/100; WJ/388; WJ/413; WJ/414; WJI/Naugrim] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nogoth

noun. [Greater] Dwarf

Sindarin [LotR/0307; PE17/045; PE17/046; SA/naug; UT/318; UTI/Nogothrim; WJ/338; WJ/388; WJ/413; WJI/Nogoth] Group: Eldamo. Published by

naug

noun/adjective. stunted, dwarf

Sindarin [Ety/375, WJ/388, UT/100, UT/148] Group: SINDICT. Published by

naug

noun/adjective. a Dwarf

Sindarin [Ety/375, WJ/388, UT/100, UT/148] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nogon

noun. [Greater] Dwarf

nogoth

noun. Dwarf, lit. "the Stunted Folk"

Sindarin [S/435, WJ/338, WJ/388, WJ/408, WJ/413] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nogothrim

noun. Dwarf-folk

Sindarin [RGEO/75, UT/318, WJ/388] nogoth+rim. Group: SINDICT. Published by

norn

noun/adjective. hard; dwarf

Sindarin [MR/093; MRI/Nornwaith; NM/373; PE23/139; WJI/Nornwaith; WJI/Nyrn] Group: Eldamo. Published by

naugrim

noun. Dwarves

Sindarin [WJ/388] naug+rim. Group: SINDICT. Published by

nogotheg

noun. lit. "dwarflet", a name of the Petty-Dwarves

Sindarin [WJ/388] Group: SINDICT. Published by

hadhod

dwarf

  1. hadhod (i chadhod, o chadhod), pl. hedhyd (i chedhyd), coll. pl. hadhodrim (WJ:388). This was a word borrowed from Dwarvish Khazâd. 2) naug (in compounds -nog), pl. #noeg, coll. pl. naugrim, nogrim. (WJ:388, 408, 413; VT45:13). In ”Noldorin” the pl. was nuig, but the Sindarin pl. form noeg is attested in Nibin-noeg ”Petty-dwarves” (WJ:187, 420). Note: naug is also used as an adj. ”dwarfed, stunted”. This word for ”dwarf” also appears in a diminutive form: naugol (in compounds naugla-), coll. pl. nauglath. 2)

naug

dwarf

(in compounds -nog), pl. #noeg, coll. pl. naugrim, nogrim. (WJ:388, 408, 413; VT45:13). In ”Noldorin” the pl. was nuig, but the Sindarin pl. form noeg is attested in Nibin-noeg ”Petty-dwarves” (WJ:187, 420). Note: naug is also used as an adj. ”dwarfed, stunted”. This word for ”dwarf” also appears in a diminutive form: naugol (in compounds naugla-), coll. pl. nauglath. 2)

hadhod

dwarf

(i chadhod, o chadhod), pl. hedhyd (i chedhyd), coll. pl. hadhodrim (WJ:388). This was a word borrowed from Dwarvish Khazâd.

nogoth

dwarf

nogoth (pl. negyth; coll. pl. nogothrim). Archaic pl. ”noegyth” = nögyth (WJ:388, 408) 3) norn (pl. nyrn, coll. pl. nornwaith). From the adj. norn ”twisted, knotted, crabbed, hard”. (MR:93, WJ:205) 4) #Gonhir (i **Onhir), literally ”Master of Stone”, no distinct pl. form except with article (i Ngonhir = i Ñonhir, maybe primarily used as a coll. pl. Gonhirrim _(WJ:205, there spelt ”Gonnhirrim”) _The coll. pl. Dornhoth** ("Thrawn folk") (WJ:388, 408) also refers to the Dwarves.

nogoth

dwarf

(pl. negyth; coll. pl. nogothrim). Archaic pl. ”noegyth” = nögyth (WJ:388, 408) 3) norn (pl. nyrn, coll. pl. nornwaith). From the adj. norn ”twisted, knotted, crabbed, hard”. (MR:93, WJ:205) 4) #Gonhir (i ’Onhir), literally ”Master of Stone”, no distinct pl. form except with article (i Ngonhir = i Ñonhir, maybe primarily used as a coll. pl. Gonhirrim  (WJ:205, there spelt ”Gonnhirrim”) The coll. pl. Dornhoth ("Thrawn folk") (WJ:388, 408) also refers to the Dwarves.

Niben-naug

petty-dwarf

  1. *Niben-naug, -nog; pl. Nibin-noeg, coll. pl. Nibin-nogrim (UT:148), 2) Nogoth niben, pl. Negyth nibin (archaic pl. ”Noegyth nibin” = Nögyth nibin, WJ:388, 408). Also called nogotheg (”dwarflet”), pl. negethig for archaic nögethig (WJ:388).

nogotheg

petty-dwarf

(”dwarflet”), pl. negethig for archaic nögethig (WJ:388).

nauglamír

proper name. Necklace of the Dwarves

The Necklace of the Dwarves holding a Silmaril (S/114), a combination of [N.] naugol “Dwarf” and mîr “jewel” (SA/mîr), the middle a perhaps being the archaic genitive suffix -a.

Conceptual Development: In the earliest Lost Tales, this name was G. Nauglafring (LT2/221), a form that was retained in the early Silmarillion drafts (SM/33, SM/134), but was replaced with Ilk. Nauglamír later in the 1930s (SM/313, LR/141). In The Etymologies, this name was designated Doriathrin [Ilkorin], with its initial element being the genitive of Dor. naugol “dwarf” (Ety/NAUK, MIR). This form was not updated in the Silmarillion revisions from the 1950s-60s, but no longer fit the phonology of later Sindarin (the expected form would be Nauglavir). Either it was dialectical or (more likely) Tolkien never got around to revising it.

Sindarin [S/114; SA/mîr; SI/Nauglamír; SI/Necklace of the Dwarves] Group: Eldamo. Published by

niben

adjective. petty, petty, *small and weak

A word for “petty”, most notable as an element in Nogoth Niben “Petty Dwarf” (WJ/388). In notes from the late 1960s, Tolkien said this word was the play name of the littlest finger (VT48/6). Some notes on roots having to do with “small” had the root √NIP “small, usually with connotation of weakness”, which Patrick Wynne suggested was the likely basis for niben (VT48/18). Thus this word means both small as well as weak or inferior.

Sindarin [UT/100; VT48/06; VT48/18; WJ/388] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Niben-naug

petty-dwarf

*Niben-naug, -nog; pl. Nibin-noeg, coll. pl. Nibin-nogrim (UT:148)

niben-naug

petty-dwarf

nog; pl. Nibin-noeg, coll. pl. *Nibin-nogrim** (UT:148)*

Nogrod

Nogrod

Nogrod can be analyzed as containing Naug/Nogoth "dwarf"; the second element *-rod could be a form of rhaud "hollow, cavernous".[source?] Its name in Khuzdul was Tumunzahar (meaning "Hollowbold"), and its Quenya name was Návarot.

Sindarin [Tolkien Gateway] Published by

naug

stunted

naug (dwarfed), pl. #noeg. Note: the word is also used as a noun ”dwarf”.

norn

hard

norn (twisted, knotted, crabbed, contorted), pl. nyrn. Also used as noun = ”Dwarf”. (MR:93, WJ:205)

norn

hard

(twisted, knotted, crabbed, contorted), pl. nyrn. Also used as noun = ”Dwarf”. (MR:93, WJ:205)

adar

noun. father

Sindarin [Ety/349, PM/324, MR/373, LotR/II:II, VT/44:21-22] Group: SINDICT. Published by

adar

noun. father

The Sindarin word for “father”, derived from the root √AT(AR) (PM/324; VT44/21-22; VT48/19).

Conceptual Development: N. adar “father” also appeared in The Etymologies of the 1930s as a derivative of the root ᴹ√ATA of the same meaning (Ety/ATA). In the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s, however, G. †ador “father” was marked as archaic, and it seems {athon >>} G. nathon was the ordinary word for ”father” (GL/17, 59).

Sindarin [PM/324; VT44/22; VT48/17] Group: Eldamo. Published by

atheg

noun. "litte father"

Sindarin [VT/48:6,17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

atheg

noun. thumb (Elvish play-name used by and taught to children)

Sindarin [VT/48:6,17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

dern

hard

adj. hard, thrawn. Also used for Dwarves, esp. in pl2. dernlir. >> gorn

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:46] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

dornhoth

noun. the Dwarves, lit. "the Thrawn Folk"

Sindarin [WJ/388] dorn+hoth. Group: SINDICT. Published by

dîr

adjective. hard

_ adj. _hard, difficult. dērā << dīrā. >> dír-

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:154] < _dērā _< DER. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

faeg

adjective. mean, poor, bad

Sindarin [Ety/387, X/OE] Group: SINDICT. Published by

gorn

hard

adj. hard, thrawn. Also used for Dwarves, esp. in pl2. gornhoth (hostile implication). >> dern

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:46] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

gorn

hard

_ adj. _hard, stiff, thrawn. >> gornod, gordh

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:154] < GUR hard, difficult (_e.g. _Old Norse _tor-_, Greek δυς-). Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

hadhodrim

noun. the Dwarves (as a race)

Sindarin [WJ/388] hadhod+rim. Group: SINDICT. Published by

nornwaith

noun. the Dwarves

Sindarin [MR/93, MR/106] norn+gwaith. Group: SINDICT. Published by

ada

father

(pl. edai)

adanadar

father of men

normally pl. Edenedair "Fathers of Men", the early Edain.

adar

father

adar (pl. edair);

adar

father

(pl. edair);

brannon

lord

(i** vrannon), pl. brennyn (i** mrennyn), coll. pl. brannonnath

faeg

mean

(adj.) faeg (poor, bad); no distinct pl. form. Suggested Sindarin form of ”Noldorin” foeg.

faeg

mean

(poor, bad); no distinct pl. form. Suggested Sindarin form of ”Noldorin” foeg.

heron

lord

(i cheron, o cheron) (master), pl. heryn (i cheryn), coll. pl. heronnath** (VT45:22). Since the pl. heryn clashes with the fem. sg. heryn** ”lady”, other words for ”lord” may be preferred.

hîr

lord

  1. hîr (i chîr, o chîr; also hir-, her- at the beginning of compounds) (master), no distinct pl. form, not even with article (i chîr), coll. pl. híriath (Letters:282, 386; VT41:9); 2) heron (i cheron, o cheron) (master), pl. heryn (i cheryn), coll. pl. heronnath (VT45:22)._ _Since the pl. heryn clashes with the fem. sg. heryn ”lady”, other words for ”lord” may be preferred. 3) brannon (i vrannon), pl. brennyn (i mrennyn), coll. pl. brannonnath; 4) tûr (i dûr, o thûr, construct tur) (mastery, power, control; master, victor), pl. tuir (i thuir), coll. pl. túrath.

hîr

lord

(i chîr, o chîr; also hir-, her- at the beginning of compounds) (master), no distinct pl. form, not even with article (i chîr), coll. pl. híriath (Letters:282, 386; VT41:9)

niben

petty

niben (small), pl. nibin. Also used as a name for the the little finger (VT48:6).

niben

petty

(small), pl. nibin. Also used as a name for the the little finger (VT48:6).

thel

mean

(verb) ?thel- (intend, purpose, resolve, will)

thel

mean

(intend, purpose, resolve, will)

tûr

lord

(i** dûr, o thûr, construct tur) (mastery, power, control; master, victor), pl. tuir (i** thuir), coll. pl. túrath.

Noldorin 

naug

noun. Dwarf

Noldorin [Ety/NAUK; EtyAC/NAUK] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nawag

noun. Dwarf

Noldorin [Ety/NAUK; EtyAC/NAUK; LR/274; LRI/Neweg; WJI/Neweg] Group: Eldamo. Published by

naugl

noun. dwarf

Noldorin [Ety/375] Group: SINDICT. Published by

naugol

noun. dwarf

Noldorin [Ety/375] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nawag

noun. Dwarf

Noldorin [Ety/375] Group: SINDICT. Published by

naugla

noun. *Dwarf

naugol

noun. Dwarf (diminutive)

Noldorin [Ety/NAUK; LR/405] Group: Eldamo. Published by

naug

noun/adjective. stunted, dwarf

Noldorin [Ety/375, WJ/388, UT/100, UT/148] Group: SINDICT. Published by

naug

noun/adjective. a Dwarf

Noldorin [Ety/375, WJ/388, UT/100, UT/148] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nogrod

place name. Dwarfmine, Dwarf-city

Noldorin [Ety/NAUK; LR/274; LRI/Nogrod; RSI/Nogrod; SMI/Nogrod] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ada

noun. father, daddy

Noldorin [Ety/349] Group: SINDICT. Published by

adar

noun. father

Noldorin [Ety/349, PM/324, MR/373, LotR/II:II, VT/44:21-22] Group: SINDICT. Published by

adar

noun. father

brannon

noun. lord

Noldorin [Ety/351] Group: SINDICT. Published by

brannon

noun. lord

Noldorin [Ety/BARÁD] Group: Eldamo. Published by

foeg

adjective. mean, poor, bad

Noldorin [Ety/387, X/OE] Group: SINDICT. Published by

Khuzdûl

khuzd

noun. Dwarf

Khuzdûl [LotR/0534; LotR/1132; LotRI/Dwarves; LotRI/Khazâd; LR/274; LRI/Khuzûd; PE17/035; PE17/045; PE17/085; PMI/Khazâd; RC/225; RC/269; S/091; SA/hadhod; SI/Khazâd; WJ/387; WJ/414; WJI/Hadhod; WJI/Kasari; WJI/Khazâd; WRI/Khazâd] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tumunzahar

place name. Hollowbold

Khuzdûl [LRI/Tumunzahar; S/091; SI/Nogrod; SI/Tumunzahar; WJ/209; WJ/389; WJI/Tumunzahar] Group: Eldamo. Published by

uzbad

noun. lord

Khuzdûl [PE17/047] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Primitive elvish

nuk

root. dwarf, stunted

Tolkien used words like Q. nauco and S. naug for “dwarf” throughout his life, but the underlying root evolved over time. No root for these words appeared in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, but based on words like G. naud “bowed, bent”, G. naug “dwarf”, and G. naur “ill-tempered, sour, grumbling”, it was probably something like ✱ᴱ√NAWA (GL/59), Tolkien’s portrayal of Dwarves was not very positive in his earliest writings. In The Etymologies he gave the root as unglossed ᴹ√NAU̯K, likely a reduction of ᴹ√NÁWAK, the latter represented in the variant word N. Nawag for “Dwarf” (Ety/NAUK).

In later writings Tolkien generally gave the root as √NUK (PE17/45; VT39/7; WJ/392), which he glossed “dwarf, stunted” in the Quendi and Eldar essay of 1959-60, clarifying that this specifically was used for things “not reaching full growth or achievement, failing of some mark or standard” and (prior to their application to Dwarves) “S naug, Q nauka, especially applied to things that though in themselves full-grown were smaller or shorter than their kind, and were hard, twisted or ill-shapen” (WJ/413). So this use as the name for Dwarves remained fairly insulting.

Primitive elvish [PE17/045; PE17/169; VT39/07; WJ/392; WJ/413] Group: Eldamo. Published by

naukā

adjective. stunted, shortened, dwarf(ed)

Primitive elvish [PE17/045; WJ/413] Group: Eldamo. Published by

at(ar)

root. father

As the basis for “father” words, √AT and its extended form √ATAR date all the way back to Tolkien’s earliest ideas. The root itself did not explicitly appear in the Qenya or Gnomish Lexicons of the 1910s, but forms like ᴱQ. atar, G. †ador “father” indicate its presence (QL/33; GL/17). The root ᴹ√ATA “father” did appear in The Etymologies of the 1930s with derivatives ᴹQ. atar, N. adar (Ety/ATA) and the base √AT(AR) “father” was mentioned again in late 1960s notes on Eldarin Hands, Fingers and Numerals (VT48/19). In this late period, the Elvish words for “father” remained Q. atar and S. adar (PM/324).

Primitive elvish [VT48/19] Group: Eldamo. Published by

atar

noun. father

Primitive elvish [PE21/71; PE21/74; PE21/75; PE21/76; PE21/77; PE21/83] Group: Eldamo. Published by

árātō

noun. lord

Primitive elvish [PE17/118] Group: Eldamo. Published by

North Sindarin

novrod

place name. Hollowbold

North Sindarin [SA/groth; WJ/389; WJ/414; WJI/Grodnof; WJI/Novrod] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Adûnaic

arûn

masculine name. Lord

An Adûnaic name for Morgoth, perhaps coined by Sauron when he introduced the worship of the dark god to the Númenóreans, translated as “Lord” (SD/376). It is derived from the word ârû “king” and was sometimes used in a compound together with Morgoth’s true Adûnaic name: Arûn-Mulkhêr (SD/367). In other writings (SD/357) it was the original Adûnaic name of Morgoth before he fell to evil, but that hardly makes sense in the conceptual scenario of the later Silmarillion, in which Morgoth had already become evil before men awoke.

Adûnaic [SD/357; SD/376; SDI2/Arûn] Group: Eldamo. Published by

attô

noun. father

A noun for “father” (SD/434). Tolkien gave two forms of this word, attû and attô, with no indication as to which would be preferred. For reasons similar to those given in the entry for ammê “mother”, my guess is that attû is an archaic form, and attô was preferred by the time of Classical Adûnaic. This word is probably related to the Elvish root √AT(AR) “father”, perhaps from Primitive Elvish ᴹ✶atū.

bâr

noun. lord

A noun translated as “lord” (SD/311, 428). This nouns wins the prize for “most inflected Adûnaic noun”, since we have declensions for this noun in both the draft Adûnaic grammar and the later grammar of Lowdham’s Report. As such, it is very helpful for comparing how the noun declensions changed as Tolkien developed Adûnaic grammar. For example, comparing its draft plurals bāri/bārim to its later plural bârî/bârîm indicate the draft plural was originally formed with a short rather than long i. There are a few lingering examples of this short-i plural in later writings (SD/247, 251).

Conceptual Development: In earlier writings the rejected name Kherû “Lord” (SD/376) indicates a possible earlier form of this noun; Kherû itself was changed to Arûn. A similar form reappears in later writings in the name Adûnakhôr “Lord of the West”: either akhôr or khôr “lord”. Whether or not this later word replaced bâr is unknown.

Adûnaic [SD/247; SD/251; SD/311; SD/312; SD/428; SD/429; SD/437; SD/438; SD/439] Group: Eldamo. Published by

kherû

masculine name. Lord

A rejected draft version of the Adûnaic name for Morgoth translated “Lord”, replaced by Arûn of the same meaning (SD/376). It is transparently a derivative of the Elvish root ᴹ√KHER, as suggested by Carl Hostetter and Patrick Wynn (AAD/18). A later form of this word, ✱khôr “lord”, may appears as an element in the name Adûnakhôr “Lord of the West”.

Adûnaic [SD/376; SDI2/Arûn] Group: Eldamo. Published by

khôr Reconstructed

noun. lord

An element meaning “lord” appearing only in the name Adûnakhôr “Lord of the West”, though a similar form appears in the earlier names Kherû “Lord” and Mulkhêr “Lord of Darkness”. It isn’t clear whether this element is ✱akhôr or ✱khôr, but khôr resembles the Primitive Elvish root √KHER “rule, govern, possess”, to which it may be related.

This possible relationship has been suggested by various authors (AL/Adûnaic, EotAL/KHUR). Andreas Moehn rejected the relationship, pointing out that Primitive Elvish ✶khēru “lord” would have developed phonetically into Ad. ✱✱khîru (EotAL). However, khôr may be derived from some more ancient Avari loan word, which underwent different phonetic developments than those of the Eldarin languages, perhaps ✶kher- > khar > khaur > Ad. khôr.

Telerin 

atta

noun. father


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!

Doriathrin

naugol

noun. Dwarf

A Doriathrin word for “Dwarf” derived from the root ᴹ√NAUK- or NAWAK (Ety/NAUK). Tolkien said that it was a diminutive form, not a direct cognate of ᴹQ. nauko or N. naug. It may be derived from a primitive form such as ✱✶naukle, as suggested by Helge Fauskanger (AL-Doriathrin/naugol), though there isn’t enough evidence to determine the original final vowel, since primitive final vowels vanished in Ilkorin. The final -ol appeared because [[ilk|[o] developed between a consonant and final [l]]] in Ilkorin.

Its genitive form naugla appears as an element in Dor. Nauglamír “Necklace of the Dwarves” (Ety/NAUK).

Doriathrin [Ety/NAUK] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nauglamír

proper name. Necklace of the Dwarves

Doriathrin [Ety/MIR; Ety/NAUK; LR/141; LRI/Nauglamír; SM/135; SM/155; SM/313; SMI/Nauglamír; WJI/Nauglamîr] Group: Eldamo. Published by

adar

noun. father

The Ilkorin word for “father” derived from primitive ᴹ✶atar[ă], also attested in its plural form edrin (Ety/ATA). It is identical to its Noldorin cognate N. adar having undergone similar phonetic changes from its primitive form, possibly ✱✶atară.

Doriathrin [Ety/ATA] Group: Eldamo. Published by

garon

noun. lord

A Doriathrin noun for “lord” derived from the root ᴹ√ƷAR or possibly ᴹ√GAR (Ety/ƷAR), perhaps from a primitive form ✱✶ɣarān-. If so, the [[ilk|initial [ɣ] became [g]]], while the long [[ilk|[ā] became [ō]]] and then [[ilk|shortened to [o] in the final syllable of a polysyllable]].

Conceptual Development: An earlier version of this entry had Dor. garan, which likely had a short [a] in the second syllable which was preserved. Since it did not undergo the Ilkorin Syncope, the primitive form likely either had no final vowel or ended in a short [a], so the second [a] was in the final syllable, which seems to have prevented the syncope; this theory is supported by its Quenya cognate ᴹQ. haran.

Doriathrin [Ety/ƷAR; EtyAC/ƷAR; EtyAC/ƷARA] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Gnomish

naug

noun. dwarf

Gnomish [GL/59; LT1A/Nauglath] Group: Eldamo. Published by

naugli

noun. dwarf

Gnomish [GL/59; LT1A/Nauglath; LT2A/Nauglafring] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nauin

adjective. dwarf

nauglafel

adjective. mean, avaricious, (lit.) dwarf-natured

A word in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s meaning “mean, avaricious”, more literally “dwarf-natured” as a combination of G. naugla “of dwarves” and G. fel “like” (GL/59). Tolkien also gave it the Greek gloss αίσχροκέρδος, or “shameful desire of gain” according to the editors.

Gnomish [GL/59; LT1A/Nauglath] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ador

noun. father

bâb

noun. father

A word for “father” in the Gnomish Lexicon Slips (PE13/111). In the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s itself, G. babi or baba was “mummy, mamma” (GL/21, 57). As pointed out by Gilson, Welden, Hostetter and Wynne, there is a complementary change of {nân “father” >>} G. nân “mother” elsewhere in the Gnomish Lexicon Slips (PE13/115).

fring na nauglithon

proper name. Necklace of the Dwarves

Gnomish [LT2A/Nauglafring] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hermon

noun. lord

malc

noun. lord

nathon

noun. father

Gnomish [GL/17; GL/59] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nauglafring

proper name. Necklace of the Dwarves

Gnomish [GL/59; LT2/221; LT2A/Nauglafring; LT2I/Nauglafring; PE15/15] Group: Eldamo. Published by

túrin

masculine name. Lord

Gnomish [LT2I/Túrin; PE15/61] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Early Quenya

nauka

noun. dwarf

Early Quenya [GL/59; LT1A/Nauglath; LT2I/Nautar; PE14/009; PE15/15] Group: Eldamo. Published by

firin nautaron

proper name. Necklace of the Dwarves

Qenya cognate of G. Nauglafring in an early name list (PE15/15), a combination of a shorter form of firinga “necklace” and the genitive plural of nauta “dwarf”, appearing beside a number of variants.

Early Quenya [PE15/15] Group: Eldamo. Published by

atar

noun. father

Early Quenya [LT1A/Ilúvatar; PE14/077; PE15/72; PE15/76; PME/033; QL/033] Group: Eldamo. Published by

atto

noun. father

attu

noun. father

Early Quenya [PE16/135; PME/033; QL/033] Group: Eldamo. Published by

heru

noun. lord

Early Quenya [GL/49; LT1A/Valahíru; PME/040; QL/040] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tatto

noun. father

Qenya 

nauko

noun. dwarf

nis

noun. woman (of any kindred: elf, human or dwarf)

Qenya [Ety/NDIS; Ety/Nι; Ety/NIS; EtyAC/NDIS; EtyAC/Nι; EtyAC/NIS; PE21/08; PE23/085; PE23/086; PE23/087; PE23/103] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nér

noun. man, adult male (of any kindred: elf, human or dwarf)

Qenya [Ety/DER; Ety/NDER; Ety/NĒR; Ety/Nι; Ety/WEG; EtyAC/NĒR; PE21/16; PE21/17; PE21/19; PE21/20; PE21/21; PE21/52; PE21/60; PE21/62; PE21/65; PE21/69; PE22/120; PE22/124; PE23/085; PE23/086; PE23/087; PE23/103; PE23/105; PE23/108] Group: Eldamo. Published by

atar

noun. father

Qenya [Ety/ATA; LR/061; PE22/018; PE22/046; PE22/047; PE22/118; PE22/119; PE23/081; PE23/105] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mandu

noun. lord

Westron

narag

noun. dwarf

Westron [PE17/035; PE17/137; PM/044; PM/058] Group: Eldamo. Published by

phurunargian

place name. Dwarf-delving, Moria

Westron [LotR/1137; PE17/035; PE17/137; PM/044; PM/058; PMI/Dwarrowdelf; RC/769] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Early Noldorin

naugl

noun. dwarf

Early Noldorin [PE13/150; PE15/62] Group: Eldamo. Published by

brin

noun. dwarf-glass

Early Noldorin [PE13/139] Group: Eldamo. Published by

glingna nauglir

proper name. Necklace of the Dwarves

Early Noldorin [SM/031; SMI/Glingna Nauglir] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hîr

noun. lord

Early Noldorin [PE13/121; PE13/147] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nauglafring

proper name. Necklace of the Dwarves

Early Noldorin [SM/031; SM/033; SM/134; SM/135; SM/155; SM/306; SM/313; SMI/Nauglafring; SMI/Nauglamír] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Middle Primitive Elvish

nawak

root. *dwarf

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/NAUK; EtyAC/NAUK] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ata

root. father

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/ATA] Group: Eldamo. Published by

atar

noun. father

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/ATA; PE21/66] Group: Eldamo. Published by

atū

noun. father

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/ATA] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Early Primitive Elvish

nawa Speculative

root. dwarf

Early Primitive Elvish Group: Eldamo. Published by

ʒono Reconstructed

root. hard

Early Primitive Elvish [LT1A/Gondolin; QL/066; QL/067; QL/070] Group: Eldamo. Published by