Quenya 

leper

finger

leper (pl. leperi given) noun "finger" (VT44:16, VT47:10, 14, 24, VT48:5; an older source gives the word for "finger" as lepsë, q.v.)

leper

noun. finger

The Quenya word for “finger” appearing in various notes on Eldarin Hands, Fingers and Numerals from 1968, derived from the root √LEP “pick up” (VT47/10; VT48/5).

Conceptual Development: The Quenya “finger” words went through quite a few conceptual changes, but they were always based on the root √LEP. The earliest of these was ᴱQ. let (lept-) “finger” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s under the early root ᴱ√LEPE with plural form lepsi (QL/53). In Qenya word lists of the 1920s, however, this became ᴱQ. lepta “finger”, still with the plural lepsi (PE15/72; PE16/137).

The form was ᴹQ. let (leps-) in the Declension of Nouns of the early 1930s (PE21/19, 26), expanded to ᴹQ. lepse “finger” in The Etymologies written around 1937, based on the root ᴹ√LEPET of the same meaning (Ety/LEPET). This form demonstrated the 1930s sound change whereby pt became ps (PE19/44 note #44). Tolkien revised this sound change so that the result remained pt (PE19/44), and in 1940s drafts to The Lord of the Rings Tolkien used the word ᴹQ. rakkalepta “✱claw-fingered” in Treebeard’s description of orcs (SD/68), though in the published version this word only appeared in English.

In the Outline of Phonology from the 1950s (OP1) Tolkien considered restoring the sound change pt > ps (PE19/84 note #75), and Q. lepsë appeared in notes from the late 1950s or early 60s on the tree name S. lebethron, so named because “its leaves (like chestnut) [were] shaped like a fingered hand” (PE17/89). However, he again abandoned this, clarifying that the actual result of [[q|[pt] was a spirantal [ɸt]]] (spelled pt to represent the bilabial pronunciation), and that in Tarquesta pronunciation (Exhilic Quenya of the first age) the [ɸ] vocalized to [u̯] so that ✶lepta > leꝑta > Q. leu̯ta “finger” (PE19/84). Q. lepta appeared in several words in the 1960s: Q. leptafinya “clever-fingered” (PE17/17) and Q. Tyelpelepta “✱silver-fingered” (VT47/27).

In drafts of the 1968 notes on Eldarin Hands, Fingers and Numerals, lepta reappeared as an independent word, but with the gloss “thumb” (VT47/27). In the final versions of these notes, however, Tolkien used leper for “finger”, as noted above.

Neo-Quenya: For purposes of Neo-Quenya, I would use leper for “finger”, but would retain lepta as an adjective meaning “fingered”, especially in compounds like [ᴹQ.] raccalepta “claw-fingered”.

Cognates

  • S. leber “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
  • T. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05

Derivations

  • leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT44/16
    • lepero “finger” ✧ VT47/13; VT47/24
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24

Element in

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
leper- > leper[leper]✧ VT47/10
leper- > leper[leper]✧ VT47/24
leper > leper[leper]✧ VT48/05
Quenya [VT47/03; VT47/04; VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05] Group: Eldamo. Published by

lepsë

finger

lepsë noun "finger" (LEP/LEPET; see leper). According to VT45:27, Tolkien derived lepsë from primitive ¤lepti; if so, lepsë should have the stem-form *lepsi-. However, Tolkien struck out the ancestral form lepti, so we cannot be sure whether this idea was maintained or not. In later sources, the word for "finger" appears as leper.

lepsë

noun. *finger

Variations

  • lepse ✧ PE17/089

leuta

noun. finger

Derivations

  • lepetā “thumb, ‘picker’; finger” ✧ PE19/084
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/27

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
lepta > leꝑta > leu̯ta[lepta] > [leɸta] > [leuta]✧ PE19/084

Variations

  • leu̯ta ✧ PE19/084

wine

noun. baby, child not yet fully grown

winë (stem *wini-, given the primitive form ¤wini) noun "baby, child not yet fully grown", "little-one", also used in children's play for "little finger" or "little toe" (VT46:10, 26, VT48:6, 16). Synonyms win(i), winimo. In Exilic Quenya, this word would appear as *vinë; compare the related word winya > vinya "young, new".

hinyë

noun. baby

A word for a “baby” in rough notes on Elvish finger names (VT47/27), probably some kind of diminutive formation from √KHIN “child”. It had a variant hintil that is clearly specific to fingers only: = √KHIN + √TIL “✱baby finger, (lit.) child tip”.

Neo-Quenya: For purposes of Neo-Quenya, it is probably better to use one of the baby words from the more finished versions of these notes, such as vinimo.

Derivations

Variations

  • hintil ✧ VT47/27
  • hinye ✧ VT47/27

mintë

small

mintë adj. "small" (VT45:35)

nincë

small

*nincë (ninci*-) ("k")adj. "small". The form is given as "ninki" with the last vowel marked as short; this is probably the etymological form that would underlie Quenya nincë. The word is said to mean "small" with "good senses"; contrast nípa**, *nimpë. (VT48:18)

nésa

sister

nésa (Þ) noun "sister" (VT47:14); this form from a late source possibly replaces earlier seler and onórë, q.v.

nésa

noun. sister

A word for “sister” coined by Tolkien in notes on Eldarin Hands, Fingers and Numerals from the late 1960s, based on the root √NETH of similar meaning (VT47/12, 14). It had a diminutive/affectionate variant nettë used as a play name for the fourth finger in several places in these notes (VT47/12; VT48/6), but I prefer to mainly use nettë for “(little) girl” in Neo-Quenya (VT47/10, 15, 33).

Conceptual Development: The Etymologies of the 1930s had ᴹQ. seler “sister” from the root ᴹ√THEL or THELES (Ety/THEL), and the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s had ᴱQ. heresse “sister” from the early root ᴱ√HESE (QL/40). See those entries for discussion.

Cognates

  • S. nîth “sister” ✧ VT47/14
  • T. néþa “sister” ✧ VT47/14

Derivations

  • nēthā “sister” ✧ VT47/14
    • NETH “(young) woman, female person; sister; fresh, lively, merry, (young) woman, female person; sister; fresh, lively, merry; [ᴹ√] young” ✧ VT47/12

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
nēthā > néþa > nésa[nētʰā] > [nēθā] > [nēθa] > [nēsa]✧ VT47/14

onórë

sister

onórë noun "sister" (of blood-kin) (THEL/THELES, NŌ; both of these entries in the Etymologies as reproduced in LR have the reading "onóne", but the "Old Noldorin" cognate wanúre listed in the entry THEL/THELES seems to indicate that the Quenya word should be onórë; the letters n and r are easily confused in Tolkien's handwriting. There is no clear evidence for a feminine ending - in Quenya, but - is relatively well attested; cf. for instance ontarë.) A later source gives the word for "sister" as nésa instead.

seler

sister

seler (þ) (sell-, as in pl. selli) noun "sister" (THEL/THELES). In a later source, the word nésa (q.v.) appears instead, leaving the conceptual status of seler uncertain.

winicë

baby

winicë (also wincë), noun "baby", also used in children's play for "little finger" or "little toe" (VT48:6). Synonyms winë, winimo. In Exilic Quenya, this word would appear as *vinicë*, vincë; compare the related word winya > vinya "young, new". Since the diminutive ending -icë descends from -iki(VT48:16), winicë may have the stem-form winici**-.

inya

small

inya (2) adj. "small" (LT1:256; this "Qenya" word may be obsoleted by # 1 above)

cinta

small

cinta adj. "small" (PE17:157)

cinta

adjective. small

Cognates

  • S. cidinn “[unglossed]” ✧ PE17/157

Derivations

  • KIT “*small” ✧ PE17/157

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
KIT > cinta[kinta]✧ PE17/157

tillë

tip, point

tillë (pl. tilli given) noun "tip, point", used with reference to fingers and toes (VT47:10, 26); compare ortil, nútil, q.v.

amal

mother

amal noun "mother"; also emel (VT48:22, 49:22); the form amil (emil) seems more usual.

amil

mother

amil noun "mother" (AM1), also emil (q.v.) Longer variant amillë (VT44:18-19), compounded Eruamillë "Mother of God" in Tolkien's translation of the Hail Mary (VT43:32). If amil is a shortened form of amillë, it should probably have the stem-form amill-. Also compare amilyë, amya, emya. Compounded amil- in amilessë noun "mothername" (cf. essë "name"), name given to a child by its mother, sometimes with prophetic implications (amilessi tercenyë "mother-names of insight"). (MR:217).

amil(lë)

noun. mother

Tolkien used a number of similar forms for “mother” for most of his life. The earliest of these are ᴱQ. amis (amits-) “mother” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s along with variants ᴱQ. ambi, âmi, amaimi under the root ᴱ√AMA (QL/30). An additional variant ammi appeared in the Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa (PME/30). In Early Qenya Word-lists of the 1920s Tolkien had ᴱQ. ambe or mambe “mother” (PE16/135). This became ᴹQ. amil “mother” in The Etymologies under the root ᴹ√AM “mother” (Ety/AM¹).

This 1930s form amil appears to have survived for some time. It appeared in a longer form Amille in Quenya Prayers of the 1950s (VT43/26; VT44/12, 18), and as an element in the term amilessi “mother-names” in a late essay on Elvish naming (MR/217). In the initial drafts of Elvish Hands, Fingers and Numerals from the late 1960s Tolkien used the form amilye or amye as an affectionate word for “mother”, and amaltil as the finger name for the second finger (VT47/26-27 note #34 and #35).

However, in those documents Tolkien seems to have revised the root for “mother” from √AM to √EM and the affectionate forms from amye to emya or emme (VT47/10; VT48/6, 19). The revised word for “mother” appears to be emil based on the 1st person possessive form emil(inya) (VT47/26).

Neo-Quenya: For purposes of Neo-Quenya, I prefer to retain the root √AM for “mother”, since that is what Tolkien used for 50 years, and ignore the very late change to √EM. As such, I would recommend amil(le) for “mother” and affectionate forms amme “mommy” and amya. However, if you prefer to use Tolkien’s “final” forms, then emil(le), emme and emya seem to be what Tolkien adopted in the late 1960s.

Cognates

  • S. emel “mother”

Derivations

  • amal “mother”
    • AM “mother” ✧ VT48/19; VT48/19

Element in

Variations

  • Amille ✧ VT44/18
Quenya [VT44/18; VT47/26] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ammë

mother

ammë noun "mother" (AM1)

emel

mother

emel noun "mother"; also amal (VT48:22, 49:22); the form amil (emil) seems more usual.

emil

mother

emil noun "mother", emilinya "my mother" (also reduced to emya) the terms a child would use in addressing his or her mother (VT47:26). Emil would seem to be a variant of amil. Also compare emel.

emil

noun. mother

ontari

mother

ontari noun "mother" or etymologically "begetter, parent" (fem.); clashing with the plural ontari "parents", this was apparently an emphemeral form (see ontarë, ontaril, ontarië for other feminine forms of "begetter, parent") (VT44:7)

ontaril

mother

ontaril noun "mother", female *"begetter" (cf. onta-). Variant of ontarë. (VT43:32)

onóro

brother

onóro noun "brother" (of blood-kinship) (TOR, NŌ (WŌ) )

winimo

baby

winimo noun "baby", "little-one", used in children's play for "little finger" or "little toe" (VT47:10, VT48:6, 16). Synonyms winë, win(i). In Exilic Quenya, this word would appear as *vinimo; compare the related word winya > vinya "young, new".

hanno

brother

hanno noun "brother" (a colloquial form, cf. háno), also used in children's play for "middle finger" (VT47:12, 14, VT48:4, 6)

háno

brother

háno noun "brother", colloquially also hanno (VT47:12, 14). It is unclear whether Tolkien, by introducing this form, abandoned the older (TLT) word toron (q.v.)

háno

noun. brother

A word for “brother” coined by Tolkien in notes on Eldarin Hands, Fingers and Numerals from the late 1960s, based on the root √KHAN of the same meaning (VT47/14). It had a diminutive/affectionate variant hanno used as a play name for the middle finger in several places in these notes (VT47/12; VT48/6).

Conceptual Development: The Etymologies of the 1930s had ᴹQ. toron “brother” from the root ᴹ√TOR (Ety/TOR), and the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s had ᴱQ. herendo “brother” from the early root ᴱ√HESE (QL/40). See those entries for discussion.

Cognates

  • S. hawn “brother” ✧ VT47/14
  • T. háno “brother” ✧ VT47/14

Derivations

  • KHAN “brother” ✧ VT47/14

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
KHAN > hāno[kʰāno] > [xāno] > [hāno]✧ VT47/14

Variations

  • hāno ✧ VT47/14

pinilya

small

pinilya adj. "small" (MC:220; this is "Qenya")

toron

brother

toron (torn- as in pl. torni) noun "brother" (TOR; a later source gives háno, hanno [q.v.] as the word for "brother", leaving the status of toron uncertain)

ortil

up-point

ortil (ortill-, pl. ortilli given) noun "up-point", term used in children's play for "finger", the counterpart of nútil, q.v. (VT47:10)

ortil

noun. up-point

mamil

mother, mummy

mamil noun *"mother, mummy" (UT:191)

osellë

sister, [female] associate

osellë (þ) noun "sister, [female] associate" (THEL/THELES, WŌ). Cf. otorno.

lepta-

verb. to pick (up/out); to finger, feel with the fingertips

Cognates

  • S. leutha- “to pick (up/out)” ✧ VT47/10
  • T. lepta- “to pick (up/out); to finger, feel with the fingertips” ✧ VT47/10

Derivations

  • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT44/16; VT47/10; VT47/24

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
LEP > lepta-[lepta-] > [laɸta-]✧ VT44/16
LEP > lepta-[lepta-] > [laɸta-]✧ VT47/10
LEP > lepta-[lepta-] > [laɸta-]✧ VT47/24

Variations

  • leppa ✧ VT47/23 (leppa)
Quenya [VT44/16; VT47/10; VT47/23; VT47/24] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mitsa

small

mitsa adj. "small" (VT45:35) Another synonym from the same source, mitra, looks unusual for a Quenya word (because of the medial cluster tr)

nitya

small

#nitya adj. "small" (VT48:15, PM:365)

nápo

thumb

nápo noun "thumb" (VT47:10, VT48:4, 5). Compare nápat.

níca

small

níca ("k")adj. "small". The word is said to mean "small" with "good senses"; contrast nípa, *nimpë. (VT47:26, VT48:18)

tollë

noun. thumb

Changes

  • (tal)tolle(lep)tolle ✧ VT47/27

Derivations

  • TOL “stick up or out, stand up (out and above neighboring things), raise the head” ✧ VT47/26

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
TOL > tolle[tolle]✧ VT47/26

Variations

  • tolle ✧ VT47/26
  • (lep)tolle ✧ VT47/27
  • (tal)tolle ✧ VT47/27 ((tal)tolle)
Quenya [VT47/26; VT47/27] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tolpë

thumb

tolpë noun "thumb" (VT47:28, VT48:8), a form Tolkien may have rejected in favour of nápo, q.v.

tolpë

noun. thumb

Changes

  • tolpenāpo ✧ VT47/10
  • tolpetolbo “thumb” ✧ VT47/28

Cognates

  • T. tolmo “thumb” ✧ VT47/28

Variations

  • tolpe ✧ VT47/26 (tolpe); VT47/28; VT47/28
Quenya [VT47/26; VT47/28] Group: Eldamo. Published by

otorno

brother, sworn brother, [male] associate

otorno noun "brother, sworn brother, [male] associate" (TOR, WŌ). Cf. osellë.

toltil

thumb

[toltil noun "thumb" (VT47:26)]

toltil

noun. thumb

tolmo

thumb

[tolmo noun "thumb", rejected by Tolkien in favour of nápo (VT48:15)]

Sindarin 

lebed

noun. finger

Tolkien later seems to have replaced this form by leber

Sindarin [Ety/368, X/LH, VT/47:23-24,27] Group: SINDICT. Published by

leber

noun. finger

Sindarin [VT/47:10,23-24, VT/48:5] Group: SINDICT. Published by

leber

noun. finger

The Sindarin word for “finger”, derived from primitive ✶leper and based on the root √LEP “pick up” (VT47/10; VT48/5).

Conceptual Development: Tolkien used various Elvish words for “finger” over his life, but most were based on the root √LEP. The Gnomish Grammar and Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s had G. leptha “finger” (GG/13; GL/53), clearly derived from the early root ᴱ√LEPE that was the basis for contemporaneous Qenya finger words (QL/53). In Early Noldorin Word-lists of the 1920s it was ᴱN. lhê “finger”, derived from primitive ᴱ✶lept- (PE13/148). In The Etymologies of the 1930s it was N. lhebed “finger” based on the root ᴹ√LEPET of the same meaning (Ety/LEP). In drafts of the 1968 notes mentioned above, Tolkien had S. lebed “finger” (VT47/27), but this was replaced by leber in the finished versions (VT47/23-24 note #30).

Cognates

  • Q. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05

Derivations

  • leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT47/24; VT48/05; VT48/05
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT44/16
    • lepero “finger” ✧ VT47/13; VT47/24
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24

Element in

  • S. lebdas “index finger” ✧ VT48/05
  • S. lebenedh “middle finger” ✧ VT48/05
  • S. lebent “fourth finger” ✧ VT48/05
  • ᴺS. leberen “fingered, of fingers”
  • S. lebethron “Gondorian hardwood, *(lit.) finger tree”
  • S. lebig “little finger” ✧ VT48/05

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
leper- > leber[lepero] > [leper] > [leber]✧ VT47/10
leper- > lebir[leperī] > [leperi] > [lepiri] > [lepir] > [lebir]✧ VT47/10
leper- > leber[lepero] > [leper] > [leber]✧ VT47/24
leperī > lebir[leperī] > [leperi] > [lepiri] > [lepir] > [lebir]✧ VT47/24
leper > leber[lepero] > [leper] > [leber]✧ VT48/05
leperī > lebir[leperi] > [leperi] > [lepiri] > [lepir] > [lebir]✧ VT48/05

Variations

  • lebed ✧ VT47/23 (lebed)
Sindarin [VT47/10; VT47/23; VT47/24; VT48/05] Group: Eldamo. Published by

lebent

noun. ring finger

Sindarin [VT/48:5] Group: SINDICT. Published by

lebdas

noun. index finger

Sindarin [VT/48:5] Group: SINDICT. Published by

tas

noun. index finger

Sindarin [VT/48:5] Group: SINDICT. Published by

lebenedh

noun. middle finger

Sindarin [VT/48:5] Group: SINDICT. Published by

lebig

noun. little finger

Sindarin [VT/48:5,15] Group: SINDICT. Published by

niged

noun. little finger

Sindarin [VT/48:5] Group: SINDICT. Published by

cinnog

adjective. small

_ adj. _small. Q. cinta.

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:157] < KIN, KIT. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

gwinig

noun. "litte baby"

Sindarin [VT/48:6,16-17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

gwinig

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

Sindarin [VT/48:6,16-17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

neth

noun. sister

Sindarin [VT/47:14-16,33, VT/48:6] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nethel

noun. sister

A word for “sister” coined by Tolkien in notes on Eldarin Hands, Fingers and Numerals from the late 1960s, based on the root √NETH of similar meaning and replacing the archaic form of the word †nîth (VT47/12, 14). The diminutive/affectionate form nethig “[little] sister” was used as a play name for the fourth finger (VT48/6); Tolkien considered an alternate diminutive netheg (VT47/14, 32) and also considered giving this diminutive an alternate meaning “little girl” (VT47/15, 33); see S. neth for discussion.

Conceptual Development: The Etymologies of the 1930s had N. thêl “sister” from the root ᴹ√THEL or THELES (Ety/THEL), and the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s had G. hethir “sister” from the early root ᴱ√HESE [HEÞE] (GL/48; QL/40). See those entries for discussion.

nîth

noun. sister

Sindarin [VT/47:14] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nîth

noun. sister

Cognates

  • Q. nésa “sister” ✧ VT47/14

Derivations

  • nēthā “sister” ✧ VT47/14
    • NETH “(young) woman, female person; sister; fresh, lively, merry, (young) woman, female person; sister; fresh, lively, merry; [ᴹ√] young” ✧ VT47/12

Element in

  • S. nethel “sister” ✧ VT47/14

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
nēthā > nîth[nētʰā] > [nētʰa] > [nēθa] > [nīθa] > [nīθ]✧ VT47/14

neth

noun. girl (in her teens, approaching the adult)

Sindarin [VT/47:14-16,33, VT/48:6] Group: SINDICT. Published by

hanar

noun. brother

Sindarin [VT/47:14] Group: SINDICT. Published by

hanar

noun. brother

A word for “brother” coined by Tolkien in notes on Eldarin Hands, Fingers and Numerals from the late 1960s, based on the root √KHAN of the same meaning and replacing the archaic form of the word †hawn (VT47/14). Remnants of this archaic form can be seem in the diminutive/affectionate form honeg “[little] brother” (VT48/6); Tolkien considered and apparently rejected alternates of the diminutive: honig and hanig (VT47/14; VT48/17).

Conceptual Development: The Etymologies of the 1930s had N. tôr “brother” from the root ᴹ√TOR (Ety/TOR), and the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s had G. hethos “brother” from the early root ᴱ√HESE [HEÞE] (GL/48-49; QL/40). See those entries for discussion.

Derivations

  • KHAN “brother” ✧ VT47/14

honeg

noun. "litte brother"

Given as honig in VT/47:14, but see VT/48:17 n. 13 for discussion

Sindarin [VT/48:6,16-17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

honeg

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

Given as honig in VT/47:14, but see VT/48:17 n. 13 for discussion

Sindarin [VT/48:6,16-17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

niben

adjective. small, petty

Sindarin [S/435, WJ/388, WJ/408, VT/48:6] Group: SINDICT. Published by

niben

adjective. little finger (Elvish play-name used by and taught to children)

Sindarin [S/435, WJ/388, WJ/408, VT/48:6] Group: SINDICT. Published by

cidinn

adjective. small

_ adj. _small. Q. cinta.

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:157] < KIN, KIT. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

emel

noun. mother

Sindarin [Emeldir S/155, VT/48:17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

emel

noun. mother

A word for “mother” in notes on Elvish Hands, Fingers and Numerals from the late 1960s, along with a diminutive form emelig (VT48/17 note #13). These forms were struck through and replaced by emig as the proper diminutive form from the root √EM (VT48/6), but that doesn’t necessarily invalidate emel = “mother”, which appeared elsewhere as (probably primitive) emel, emer in rough versions of these notes (VT48/19 note #16). These Sindarin forms are unusual in that the medial m did not become v, which means the primitive form was likely based on ✱emm- as suggested by Patrick Wynne (VT48/17 note #14).

Conceptual Development: G. amil “mother” appeared in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s along with rejected forms {anwin, amril} and an archaic variant †amaith (GL/19). The forms {emaith >>} amaith appeared unglossed in Gnomish Lexicon Slips revising that document (PE13/109). In The Etymologies of the 1930s there was a form N. †emil for “mother” under the root ᴹ√AM of the same meaning, but Tolkien said this word was archaic, apparently replaced by N. naneth (Ety/AM¹; EtyAC/AM¹). With N. emil, the a became e via i-affection, but the medial m failing to become v requires an explanation similar to that of 1960s S. emel.

Neo-Sindarin: I generally prefer derivatives of the earlier root √AM for “mother” words in Quenya, but in the case of Sindarin, I find emel and emig from √EM to be better and more widely accepted.

Cognates

Derivations

  • AM “mother” ✧ VT48/17

Element in

  • S. Emeldir “Manhearted, *Manly-mother”
  • S. emig “[little] mother, mommy” ✧ VT48/17 (emel) (emelig*)

Variations

  • emen ✧ VT48/17 (emen)

emig

noun. "litte mother"

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

emmel

noun. mother

Sindarin [Emeldir S/155, VT/48:17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nethig

noun. "litte sister"

First given in the manuscript as netheg in VT/47:14-15, but see especially VT/48:17 n. 13 for discussion

Sindarin [VT/47:14, VT/47:38-39, VT/48:6,17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nethig

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

First given in the manuscript as netheg in VT/47:14-15, but see especially VT/48:17 n. 13 for discussion

Sindarin [VT/47:14, VT/47:38-39, VT/48:6,17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

hawn

noun. brother

Sindarin [VT/47:14] Group: SINDICT. Published by

hawn

noun. brother

Cognates

  • Q. háno “brother” ✧ VT47/14

Derivations

  • KHAN “brother” ✧ VT47/14

Element in

  • ᴺS. gwachon “(sworn) brother, associate”
  • S. honeg “brother (diminutive)” ✧ VT47/14

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
KHAN > hawn[kʰāno] > [xāno] > [xǭno] > [xauno] > [xaun] > [haun]✧ VT47/14

tolch

noun. (?) "litte prominent one"

Sindarin [VT/48:6,16-17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

toleg

noun. (?) "litte prominent one"

Sindarin [VT/48:6,16-17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

emig

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

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

naub

noun. thumb

A word for the thumb given as nawb in notes on Eldarin Hands, Fingers and Numerals from 1968 (VT48/5), clearly based on the root √NAP “pick up” (VT47/29). Its dual form nobad was used to refer to the “thumb and index [finger] as a pair” (VT48/5).

Conceptual Development: In rough drafts of these notes, Tolkien used lebed for “thumb, picker” from primitive ✶lepet(ā) (VT47/27). In early writings N. lhebed was instead “finger” (Ety/LEP), and its use for “thumb” was likely a transient idea.

Cognates

  • Q. nápo “thumb, (lit.) picker” ✧ VT48/05

Derivations

  • NAP “take (hold), pick up, grasp, seize quickly (with fingers)”

Element in

  • S. nobad “thumb and index finger as a pair, *(lit.) pickers”

Variations

  • nawb ✧ VT48/05

nawb

noun. thumb

Sindarin [VT/48:5] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nimp

adjective. small and frail

Sindarin [VT/48:18] Group: SINDICT. Published by

lebed

noun. thumb

Cognates

  • Q. lepta “fingered; thumb, fingered; thumb, [ᴱQ.] finger” ✧ VT47/27

Derivations

  • lepetā “thumb, ‘picker’; finger” ✧ VT47/27
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/27

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
lepet(ā) > lebed[lepetā] > [lepeta] > [lepet] > [lepet] > [lebed]✧ VT47/27

nobad

noun. the pair of fingers composed of the thumb and the index (grouped together as in the act of picking something)

Sindarin [VT/48:5,16] Group: SINDICT. Published by

toleg

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

Sindarin [VT/48:6,16-17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

tolch

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

Sindarin [VT/48:6,16-17] Group: SINDICT. Published by

leber

finger

leber (pl. lebir) (VT47:10, 23, 24; VT48:5). This may replace ”Noldorin” lhebed, which we would otherwise update to Sindarin as lebed. For names of specific fingers, see INDEX FINGER, LITTLE FINGER, MIDDLE FINGER, RING FINGER, THUMB.

neth

sister

1) neth (also used = ”girl”). (VT47:14-16, 33; VT48:6), pl. nith. Notice the homophone neth ”young”. Also nîth (no distinct pl. form though the plural article with show pluarlity when the noun is definite: in nîth) (VT47:14). 2) gwathel (i **wathel), pl. gwethil (in gwethil). 3) muinthel (i vuinthel), pl. muinthil (i muinthil), more usual than the shorter form thêl (stem thele-), pl. theli. In “Noldorin”, the pl. was thelei** (LR:392 s.v. THEL).

tinu

small star

(i** dinu, o thinu; also -din at the end of compounds) (spark), analogical pl. tiny (i** thiny). Archaic tinw, so the coll. pl. is likely  tinwath.

hanar

brother

1) hanar (i chanar, o chanar), pl. henair (i chenair) (VT47:14). A more archaic term is *haun (spelt ”hawn” in source) (i chaun, o chaun), pl. hoen (i choen), coll. pl. honath.

hanar

brother

(i chanar, o chanar), pl. henair (i chenair) (VT47:14). A more archaic term is ✱haun (spelt ”hawn” in source) (i chaun, o chaun), pl. hoen (i choen), coll. pl. honath.

honeg

little brother

(i choneg, o choneg), pl. honig (i chonig), also used as a play-name for the middle finger. (VT47:6, 16-17) 2) In older sources Tolkien listed different ”Noldorin” words for ”brother”: muindor (i vuindor), analogical pl. muindyr (i muindyr). Archaic/poetic †tôr (i** dôr, o thôr, construct tor), pl. teryn (i** theryn), coll. pl. toronath. In ”Noldorin”, the pl. was terein. 3) “Brother” in extended sense of “relative”: gwanur (i ’wanur) (kinsman, also kinswoman), pl. gwenyr (in gwenyr). Note: a homophone of the sg. means ”pair of twins”.

niben

small

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

gwador

sworn brother

(i ’wador), pl. gwedyr (in gwedyr). In ”N”, the pl. was gwedeir (LR:394 s.v. TOR)

naneth

mother

naneth (pl. nenith). Hypocoristic form (”mom”) nana, pl. nenai (but this word is probably rarely pluralized). In a higher style also †emil. No distinct pl. form; coll. pl. emillath. Variant form emel (pl. emil), also spelt emmel (pl. emmil). (VT48:17)

naneth

mother

(pl. nenith). Hypocoristic form (”mom”) nana, pl. nenai (but this word is probably rarely pluralized). In a higher style also †emil. No distinct pl. form; coll. pl. emillath. Variant form emel (pl. emil), also spelt emmel (pl. emmil). (VT48:17)

emig

little mother

(no distinct pl. form except with article: in emig). Also used (in children’s play) as a name for the index finger (VT48:6, 17)

aew

small bird

. No distinct pl. form.

glâd

small forest

(i ’lâd, construct glad) (wood), pl. glaid (in glaid).

naub

thumb

*naub (pl. noeb). The spelling used in the source is nawb (VT48:5). Dual nobad, used of the thumb and the index finger grouped together in the act of picking something (VT48:5, 6). In childrens play the thumb was also called atheg, ”little father” (pl. ethig) (VT48:6, 17)

nimp

small

no distinct pl. form (VT48:18)

mîw

small

1) mîw (tiny, frail), lenited vîw, no distinct pl. form, 2) niben (petty), pl. nibin. Also used as a name for the the little finger. (VT48:6) 3) SMALL (and frail) nimp, no distinct pl. form (VT48:18)

mîw

small

(tiny, frail), lenited vîw, no distinct pl. form

pêg

small spot

(i** bêg, construct peg) (dot), pl. pîg (i** phîg

hûb

small landlocked bay

(i chûb, o chûb, construct hub) (harbour, haven), pl. huib (i chuib).

Telerin 

leper

noun. finger

Cognates

  • Q. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05

Derivations

  • leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT44/16
    • lepero “finger” ✧ VT47/13; VT47/24
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24
Telerin [VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05] Group: Eldamo. Published by

néþa

noun. sister

Cognates

  • Q. nésa “sister” ✧ VT47/14

Derivations

  • nēthā “sister” ✧ VT47/14
    • NETH “(young) woman, female person; sister; fresh, lively, merry, (young) woman, female person; sister; fresh, lively, merry; [ᴹ√] young” ✧ VT47/12

Variations

  • nēþa ✧ VT47/14

emmë

noun. mother

Cognates

  • Q. emmë “mummy, mother (familiar/family)” ✧ VT48/06

Element in

  • T. emmecë “mother [diminutive]; *mommy” ✧ VT48/06

Variations

  • emme ✧ VT48/06

hanna

noun. brother

Cognates

  • Q. hanno “brother (diminutive)” ✧ VT48/06

Derivations

  • KHAN “brother”

Element in

  • T. hannacë “brother [diminutive]” ✧ VT48/06

háno

noun. brother

Cognates

  • Q. háno “brother” ✧ VT47/14

Derivations

  • KHAN “brother” ✧ VT47/14

Variations

  • hāno ✧ VT47/14

lepta-

verb. to pick (up/out); to finger, feel with the fingertips

Cognates

  • Q. lepta- “to pick (up/out); to finger, feel with the fingertips” ✧ VT47/10

Derivations

  • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24
Telerin [VT47/10; VT47/24] Group: Eldamo. Published by

lepet

noun. thumb

Cognates

  • Q. lepta “fingered; thumb, fingered; thumb, [ᴱQ.] finger” ✧ VT47/27

Derivations

  • lepetā “thumb, ‘picker’; finger” ✧ VT47/27
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/27

nápa

noun. thumb

Cognates

  • Q. nápo “thumb, (lit.) picker” ✧ VT48/05; VT48/05

Derivations

  • NAP “take (hold), pick up, grasp, seize quickly (with fingers)” ✧ VT47/28
  • nāpa “thumb, (lit.) picker” ✧ VT48/16
    • NAP “take (hold), pick up, grasp, seize quickly (with fingers)” ✧ VT47/29

Variations

  • nāpo ✧ VT47/28
Telerin [VT47/28; VT48/05] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tolmo

noun. thumb

Changes

  • tolmonāpo “thumb” ✧ VT47/28

Cognates

  • Q. tolpë “thumb” ✧ VT47/28

Adûnaic

ammê

noun. mother

A noun for “mother” (SD/434). Tolkien gave two forms of this word, ammî and ammê, with no indication as to which would be preferred. However, ammî resembles a plural word, and Tolkien elsewhere stated that such forms tended to change their final vowel to (SD/438), so my guess is that ammî is an archaic form. This word is probably related to the Elvish root √AM “mother”. Some authors have suggested it is directly related to ᴹQ. amme (AAD/10, AL/Adûnaic), but as Andreas Moehn points out (EotAL/MAM) such basic words are rarely borrowed from other languages, so the relationship is more likely from the Primitive Elvish root.

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. amme “mother”

Derivations

  • AM “mother”

Variations

  • ammī/ammē ✧ SD/434

Primitive elvish

lepe

noun. finger

Derivations

  • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/10

Element in

  • Q. lepecan “fourth finger” ✧ VT47/10
  • Q. lependë “middle finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/11
  • Q. lepenel “middle finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/11
  • Q. lepetas “index finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/11
  • Q. lepincë “little finger” ✧ VT47/10
  • Q. tolpë “thumb” ✧ VT47/28

Variations

  • lepen ✧ PE21/71
  • lepe- ✧ VT47/11
Primitive elvish [PE21/71; VT47/10; VT47/11; VT47/28] Group: Eldamo. Published by

leper

noun. finger

Derivations

  • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT44/16
  • lepero “finger” ✧ VT47/13; VT47/24
    • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24

Derivatives

  • Q. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
  • S. leber “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT47/24; VT48/05; VT48/05
  • T. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
lepero > leper-[lepero] > [leper]✧ VT47/13
lepero > leper-[lepero] > [leper]✧ VT47/24

Variations

  • leper- ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24
Primitive elvish [VT44/16; VT47/10; VT47/11; VT47/24; VT47/29; VT48/05] Group: Eldamo. Published by

lepero

noun. finger

Derivations

  • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24

Derivatives

  • leper “finger” ✧ VT47/13; VT47/24
    • Q. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
    • S. leber “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT47/24; VT48/05; VT48/05
    • T. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
Primitive elvish [VT47/13; VT47/24] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nēthā

noun. sister

Derivations

  • NETH “(young) woman, female person; sister; fresh, lively, merry, (young) woman, female person; sister; fresh, lively, merry; [ᴹ√] young” ✧ VT47/12

Derivatives

  • Q. nésa “sister” ✧ VT47/14
  • Q. nettë “(little) girl, sister (diminutive), daughter, pretty little thing, (little) girl, sister (diminutive), ️daughter, pretty little thing” ✧ VT47/14
  • S. nîth “sister” ✧ VT47/14
  • T. néþa “sister” ✧ VT47/14

Element in

  • netthi “girl approaching the adult, sister (diminutive)” ✧ VT47/14

Variations

  • nēthā ✧ VT47/14
Primitive elvish [VT47/14] Group: Eldamo. Published by

lepetā

noun. thumb, ‘picker’; finger

Changes

  • leper/lepetleper ✧ VT47/29

Derivations

  • LEP “pick up/out (with the fingers); finger” ✧ VT47/27

Derivatives

  • Q. lepta “fingered; thumb, fingered; thumb, [ᴱQ.] finger” ✧ VT47/27
  • Q. leuta “finger” ✧ PE19/084
  • S. lebed “thumb” ✧ VT47/27
  • T. lepet “thumb” ✧ VT47/27

Element in

Variations

  • lepta ✧ PE19/084
  • lepet- ✧ VT47/23 (lepet-)
  • lepet(ā) ✧ VT47/27
  • leper/lepet ✧ VT47/29 (leper/lepet)
Primitive elvish [PE19/084; VT47/23; VT47/27; VT47/29] Group: Eldamo. Published by

emer

noun. mother

ninkĭ

adjective. small

Derivations

  • NIK “small” ✧ VT48/18
Primitive elvish [VT48/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

am

root. mother

For most of Tolkien’s life, the Primitive Elvish root for “mother” was √AM. This began with the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, where Tolkien gave the root as ᴱ√AMA (QL/30). In The Etymologies of the 1930s it was ᴹ√AM with derivatives ᴹQ. amil and (archaic) N. emil “mother” (Ety/AM¹). In Quenya prayers of the 1950s, the word for mother was Q. Amille. In the last few years of his life, however, Tolkien toyed with the notion of changing this root to √EM. In notes associated with Eldarinwe Leperi are Notessi written in the late 1960s, Tolkien first gave the root as am, but then wrote em next to it with a question mark, along with several new em-derivatives (VT48/19 note #16). The Q. affectionate word emme for “mommy” appeared in the main article, indicating Tolkien did, in fact, adopt this new root, at least for some period of time.

Neo-Eldarin: For purposes of Neo-Quenya writing, I personally prefer to ignore this late change to the root for “mother” and stick with the √AM-forms Tolkien used for most of his life. However, the √AM-forms were less stable in the Sindarin branch of the languages, so I’d use √EM-forms like S. emel and emig, and would assume √AM and √EM were variants of the root, as they were on VT48/19 (see above).

Derivatives

  • Ad. ammê “mother”
  • amal “mother” ✧ VT48/19; VT48/19
  • Q. emmë “mummy, mother (familiar/family)” ✧ VT48/19
  • S. emel “mother” ✧ VT48/17

Element in

  • Q. amya “mummy, (orig.) my mother” ✧ VT48/19

Variations

  • am ✧ VT48/17; VT48/19
  • em ✧ VT48/17; VT48/19
Primitive elvish [VT48/17; VT48/19] Group: Eldamo. Published by

amal

noun. mother

Derivations

  • AM “mother” ✧ VT48/19; VT48/19

Derivatives

Variations

  • amas ✧ PE21/83
  • amma ✧ PE21/83
  • amme ✧ PE21/83
  • emel ✧ VT48/19
  • emer ✧ VT48/19
Primitive elvish [PE21/83; VT48/17; VT48/19] Group: Eldamo. Published by

amas

noun. mother

amma

noun. mother

amme

noun. mother

em

root. mother

emel

noun. mother

khan

root. brother

A root for “brother” that Tolkien introduced in notes on finger-names from the late 1960s as a companion to √NETH “sister” (VT47/14, 26, 34). It conflicts with, and possibly replaces, earlier uses for √KHAN such as √KHAN “back” in notes from around 1959 serving as the basis for the prefix Q. han- in hanquenta “answer” (PE17/166). The root ᴹ√KHAN also appeared in The Etymologies of the 1930s glossed “understand, comprehend”, with various derivatives in both Quenya and Noldorin of similar meaning (Ety/KHAN).

It is unlikely that all these uses of √KHAN coexisted, but I think at a minimum both √KHAN “brother” and ᴹ√KHAN “understand, comprehend” should be retained for the purposes of Neo-Eldarin, as the latter has no good replacements in Tolkien’s later writing. As for hanquenta “answer”, it might be reinterpreted as “a saying providing understanding”, and so be derived from ᴹ√KHAN “understand”.

Derivatives

  • Q. háno “brother” ✧ VT47/14
  • Q. hanno “brother (diminutive)” ✧ VT47/26; VT47/34
  • S. hanar “brother” ✧ VT47/14
  • S. hawn “brother” ✧ VT47/14
  • T. hanna “brother”
  • T. háno “brother” ✧ VT47/14

Variations

  • KHAN ✧ VT47/14
  • khan ✧ VT47/26; VT47/34
Primitive elvish [VT47/14; VT47/26; VT47/34] Group: Eldamo. Published by

lep

root. pick up/out (with the fingers); finger

This root was connected to Elvish words for “finger” for most of Tolkien’s life. It first appeared as an unglossed root ᴱ√LEPE in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s with derivatives like ᴱQ. let (lept-) “finger” and ᴱQ. lempe “crook, hook” (QL/53). There were also derivatives in the contemporaneous Gnomish Lexicon such as G. leptha “finger” and G. lempa- “beckon, crook the finger” (GL/53). The root ᴹ√LEP appeared in The Etymologies of the 1930s with extensions ᴹ√LEPET “finger” and ᴹ√LEPEN “five” and various derivatives of similar meanings (Ety/LEP).

In Tolkien’s later writings, √LEPEN “five” continued to appear regularly, along with the base root √LEP that was glossed either “finger” (VT42/24) or “pick up (with fingers)” (VT47/10, 24, 27). Despite the stability of the root, the Elvish words for “finger” themselves when through many revisions; see Q. leper and S. leber for discussion.

Derivatives

  • lepe “finger” ✧ VT47/10
  • leper “finger” ✧ VT44/16
    • Q. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
    • S. leber “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT47/24; VT48/05; VT48/05
    • T. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
  • lepero “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24
    • leper “finger” ✧ VT47/13; VT47/24
    • Q. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
    • S. leber “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT47/24; VT48/05; VT48/05
    • T. leper “finger” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24; VT48/05
  • lepetā “thumb, ‘picker’; finger” ✧ VT47/27
    • Q. lepta “fingered; thumb, fingered; thumb, [ᴱQ.] finger” ✧ VT47/27
    • Q. leuta “finger” ✧ PE19/084
    • S. lebed “thumb” ✧ VT47/27
    • T. lepet “thumb” ✧ VT47/27
  • ᴺQ. lep- “to take [with fingers], *pick, pluck”
  • Q. lepetta “Gondorian hardwood”
  • ᴺQ. lepsilë “tendril”
  • Q. lepta- “to pick (up/out); to finger, feel with the fingertips” ✧ VT44/16; VT47/10; VT47/24
  • ᴺS. leb- “to pick, pluck, take or feel or touch with fingers, cull”
  • ᴺS. lemma- “to beckon, crook the finger”
  • S. leutha- “to pick (up/out)” ✧ VT47/10
  • T. lepta- “to pick (up/out); to finger, feel with the fingertips” ✧ VT47/10; VT47/24

Element in

  • LEPEN “five” ✧ VT42/24; VT47/24; VT47/27
  • ᴺQ. leppa “thimble”
Primitive elvish [VT42/24; VT44/16; VT47/10; VT47/24; VT47/27] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nik

root. small

One of various roots for “small” Tolkien used in his later writings. The root √NIK “small” first appeared in notes on Eldarin Hands, Fingers and Numerals from the late 1960s (VT47/26; VT48/18), but was connected to the diminutive suffix ✶-i(n)ki which had a much longer conceptual history. One of the earliest known diminutive suffix was ᴱQ. -íne(a) in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s from the root ᴱ√INI “small” (QL/42), which might be a precursor to √NIK; these suffixes reappeared in the Early Qenya Grammar of the 1920s (PE14/49, 81). In the Gnomish Grammar of the 1910s, the word G. inc “small” was used as the basis for the “diminutive superlative” -inci (PE11/16).

In the Qenya Lexicon, Tolkien connected ᴱ√INI “small” to the root ᴱ√MINI of similar meaning (QL/42, 61). There are no signs of ᴱ√MINI “small” in the contemporaneous Gnomish Lexicon, but the word G. migin “little” (GL/57) hints at a (hypothetical) variant root ✱ᴱ√MIKI. Further support for ✱ᴱ√MIKI can be found in other diminutive forms in the Early Qenya Grammar of the 1920s such as prefixal diminutive ᴱQ. mike- along adverbial ᴱQ. mike “little” (QL/48, 81), the latter appearing with the gloss “a bit” in the English-Qenya Dictionary from this period (PE15/70) along with other similar words in both the dictionary and the grammar. This ✱ᴱ√MIKI might be another precursor to √NIK. An early hint at √NIK itself might appear in the word ᴹQ. nikse “minnow, little fish” from the Declension of Nouns from the early 1930s (PE21/27).

In Noldorin and Sindarin, the primary diminutive suffix became -eg, which was connected to the Common Eldarin suffix -iki elsewhere in notes on hands and fingers (VT47/14 note #21). In the notes where √NIK “small” appeared in the late 1960s, Tolkien gave the primitive diminutive as -inkĭ along with variants ikki, -iksi, -si, -ensi, -ki.

One of the main competing roots for “small” was ᴹ√PIK [see the entry for √PI(N)], itself with a lengthy conceptual history. The shift of pitya >> nitya “little” in the father name of Amrod from the late 1960s may represent a replacement of √PIK by √NIK (PM/365), but I think it is likelier the two roots coexisted with slightly different meanings, as was the case for their earlier precursors. In the notes from the late 1960s, √NIK was also contrasted with √NIP “small (usually with connotation of weakness)” (VT48/18), from which the word S. niben “petty” was derived, as in S. Nogoth Niben (WJ/388).

Neo-Eldarin: For purposes of Neo-Eldarin, I would assume √NIK meant “small” in a neutral sense, √PIK “tiny” (along with variants √ and √PIN) and √NIP “small and weak”. I would use these as the major Eldarin roots for “small” words, along with a number of other more specialized roots.

Derivatives

  • -i(n)ki “diminutive suffix” ✧ VT47/26; VT48/18
    • Q. -incë “diminutive ending”
    • S. -eg “diminutive/singular ending”
  • ninkĭ “small” ✧ VT48/18
  • Q. níca “little, small” ✧ VT47/26; VT48/18
  • ᴺQ. nihta “piece, bit (of indeterminate size)”
  • ᴺQ. nihta- “to reduce, make small”
  • ᴹQ. nikse “minnow, little fish”
  • Q. nitya “little”
  • S. niged “little finger”
  • ᴺS. nigol “mouse, (lit.) small one”
  • ᴺS. nítha- “to reduce, make small”
  • T. nícë “little finger”

Element in

  • niktil “little [finger]” ✧ VT47/26

Variations

  • nik ✧ VT47/26; VT48/18
Primitive elvish [VT47/26; VT48/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nimpĭ

adjective. small

Derivations

  • NIP “small (usually with connotation of weakness)” ✧ VT48/18

Derivatives

  • S. nimp “pale, pallid, white, pale, pallid, white; small and frail, [ᴱN.] wan, sickly” ✧ VT48/18
    • S. nim “white” ✧ SA/nim
Primitive elvish [VT48/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Noldorin 

lhebed

noun. finger

Tolkien later seems to have replaced this form by leber

Noldorin [Ety/368, X/LH, VT/47:23-24,27] Group: SINDICT. Published by

lhebed

noun. finger

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. lepse “finger” ✧ Ety/LEP

Derivations

  • ᴹ√LEPET “finger” ✧ Ety/LEP

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√LEPET > lhebed[lepete] > [lepet] > [l̥epet] > [l̥ebet] > [l̥ebed]✧ Ety/LEP

muinthel

noun. sister

Noldorin [Ety/392] muin+thêl. Group: SINDICT. Published by

muinthel

noun. sister

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

thêl

noun. sister

Noldorin [Ety/392] Group: SINDICT. Published by

thêl

noun. sister

A word for “sister” in The Etymologies of the 1930s derived from the root ᴹ√THEL or THELES of the same meaning, with an irregular plural thelei (Ety/THEL). It had a more elaborate form muinthel, the equivalent of muindor “(dear) brother”, with an initial element muin “dear”.

Neo-Quenya: In notes from the late 1960s, Tolkien introduced a new word nethel for “sister” from the root √NETH (VT47/14). However, I think thêl and related words might be retained to mean a “metaphorical sister”, a close female associate who may or may not be related by blood, as with such words as gwathel “[sworn] sister, associate”. In this paradigm, I would assume muinthel still refers to a sister by blood, with an added connotation of strong affection. I think it’s best to assume the irregular Noldorin plural pattern was reformed to the normal Sindarin plural thîl.

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. seler “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL

Derivations

  • On. thele “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
    • ᴹ√THEL(ES) “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
    • ᴹ✶thelese “*sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
    • ᴹ√THEL(ES) “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL

Element in

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
On. thele > thêl[θele] > [θel] > [θēl]✧ Ety/THEL
Noldorin [Ety/THEL] Group: Eldamo. Published by

muindor

noun. brother

Noldorin [Ety/394] muin+tôr. Group: SINDICT. Published by

muindor

noun. brother

emil

noun. mother

Noldorin [VT/45:5] Group: SINDICT. Published by

emil

noun. mother

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. amil “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹

Derivations

  • ᴹ✶amī̆l “mother”
    • ᴹ√AM “mother”
  • ᴹ√AM “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√AM¹ > emil[amil] > [emil]✧ Ety/AM¹
Noldorin [EtyAC/AM¹] Group: Eldamo. Published by

gwador

noun. brother (especially used of those not brothers by blood, but sworn brothers or associates)

Noldorin [Ety/394] Group: SINDICT. Published by

naneth

noun. mother

Noldorin [Ety/348, Ety/374] Group: SINDICT. Published by

naneth

noun. mother

A noun for “mother” in The Etymologies of the 1930s derived from the (Noldorin-only?) root ᴹ√NAN (Ety/NAN). It apparently replaced archaic/poetic N. †emil (Ety/AM¹; EtyAC/AM¹).

Conceptual Development: The Gnomish Lexicon had a similar set of words for “mother”: G. maba, mabir, baba, and mavwin from the early root ᴱ√maƀ “something nice” (GL/57). The last of these appeared as G. mavwen “ancestress” in the Gnomish Lexicon Slips modifying that document, with an archaic meaning of “mother” and variant forms mafwyn and mavuin (PE13/115). In these slips, it seems the normal “mother” word was G. nân (originally glossed “father”) with variant nanwin (PE13/115). This last word is likely the direct precursor of N. naneth.

Neo-Sindarin: I would use S. emel from the late 1960s as the normal word for “mother” in Neo-Sindarin, but would retain N. naneth as a dialectical or more formal variant.

Derivations

  • ᴹ√NAN “*mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹; Ety/NAN

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√NAN > naneth[nanitta] > [nanittʰa] > [naniθθa] > [naneθθa] > [naneθθ] > [naneθ]✧ Ety/NAN
Noldorin [Ety/AM¹; Ety/NAN] Group: Eldamo. Published by

gwathel

noun. sister, associate

Noldorin [Ety/392] Group: SINDICT. Published by

mithren

adjective. small

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. mitsa “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT; EtyAC/MIT

Derivations

  • ᴹ√MIT “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
  • ᴹ✶mitra “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
    • ᴹ√MIT “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√MIT > mint[minte] > [mintʰe] > [minθe] > [minθ] > [mint]✧ EtyAC/MIT
ᴹ✶mitra > mithren[?]✧ EtyAC/MIT

Variations

  • mint ✧ EtyAC/MIT (mint)
Noldorin [EtyAC/MIT] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tôr

noun. brother

The word muindor is more usual

Noldorin [Ety/394, X/Z] Group: SINDICT. Published by

tôr

noun. brother

An (archaic) word for “brother” in The Etymologies of the 1930s derived from the root ᴹ√TOR of the same meaning, with an irregular plural terein (Ety/TOR). In ordinary speech, it was replaced by muindor, with an initial element muin “dear”.

Neo-Sindarin: In notes from the late 1960s, Tolkien introduced a new word hanar for “brother” (VT47/14). However, I think †tôr and related words might be retained to mean a “metaphorical brother”, a close male associate who may or may not be related by blood, as with such words as gwador “(sworn) brother, associate”. In this paradigm, I would assume muindor still refers to a brother by blood, with an added connotation of strong affection.

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. toron “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR

Derivations

  • On. toron “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR; Ety/TOR
    • ᴹ√TOR “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR

Element in

  • N. muindor “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
On. toron > tôr[toron] > [toro] > [tor] > [tōr]✧ Ety/TOR

mîw

adjective. small, tiny, frail

Noldorin [VT/45:35] Group: SINDICT. Published by

nana

noun. mother, mummy

Noldorin [Ety/348, Ety/374] Group: SINDICT. Published by

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!

Primitive adûnaic

miy

root. small

A root glossed “small” that Tolkien wrote in its full-form ✶Ad. √MIYI (SD/427). For consistency this entry has normalized it to the basic form of biconsonantal roots. Although glossed as “small”, all of its attested derivatives have to do with babies.

Derivatives

  • Ad. mîk “*baby boy” ✧ SD/427
  • Ad. miya “infant” ✧ SD/427

Element in

  • Ad. mîth “baby girl, maid-child, little girl” ✧ SD/427

Variations

  • MIYI ✧ SD/427
Primitive adûnaic [SD/427] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Qenya 

lepse

noun. finger

Cognates

  • N. lhebed “finger” ✧ Ety/LEP

Derivations

  • ᴹ√LEPET “finger” ✧ Ety/LEP
  • ᴹ✶lepti ✧ EtyAC/LEP; PE19/042
    • ᴹ√LEPET “finger” ✧ Ety/LEP
    • ᴹ√LEP “*finger” ✧ PE19/042

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√LEPET > lepse[lepti] > [lepte] > [lepse]✧ Ety/LEP
ᴹ✶lepti > lepse[lepti] > [lepte] > [lepse]✧ EtyAC/LEP
ᴹ✶lepta > lehta[lepta] > [lexta]✧ PE19/042
ᴹ✶lepta > lepsa[lepta] > [lepsa]✧ PE19/042

Variations

  • lehta ✧ PE19/042 (lehta)
  • lepsa ✧ PE19/042 (lepsa)
Qenya [Ety/LEP; PE19/042] Group: Eldamo. Published by

let

noun. finger

Qenya [PE21/19; PE21/26] Group: Eldamo. Published by

seler

noun. sister

A noun for “sister” in The Etymologies of the 1930s derived from the root ᴹ√THEL or THELES of the same meaning, with an irregular plural selli (Ety/THEL), where the stem form sell- is because the Quenya syncope caused the second e to be lost and then the ancient ls became ll.

Neo-Quenya: In notes from the late 1960s, Tolkien introduced a new word nésa for “sister” (VT47/14). However, I think seler might be retained to mean a “metaphorical” sister, a close female associate who may or may not be related by blood, as with such words as meletheldi “love-sister, ✱close female friend” or ᴹQ. oselle “sworn sister”. In this sense, nésa would be limited to biological relationships, but seler would refer to sisterly (or sister-like) affection.

Cognates

  • On. thele “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
  • N. thêl “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL

Derivations

  • ᴹ√THEL(ES) “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL

Element in

  • ᴹQ. oselle “[sworn] sister, associate [f.]” ✧ Ety/THEL

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√THELES > seler[tʰeles] > [θeles] > [θeler] > [seler]✧ Ety/THEL

amil

noun. mother

Cognates

  • Ilk. aman “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹
  • N. emil “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹

Derivations

  • ᴹ✶amī̆l “mother”
    • ᴹ√AM “mother”
  • ᴹ√AM “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√AM¹ > amil[amil]✧ Ety/AM¹

amme

noun. mother

Cognates

  • Ad. ammê “mother”
  • Ilk. aman “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹

Derivations

  • ᴹ√AM “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√AM¹ > amme[amme]✧ Ety/AM¹
Qenya [Ety/AM¹; PE22/023] Group: Eldamo. Published by

toron

noun. brother

A noun for “brother” in The Etymologies of the 1930s derived from the root ᴹ√TOR of the same meaning, with a somewhat irregular plural torni (Ety/TOR). Its stem form is torn-, since with most inflected forms the Quenya syncope comes into play and the second o is lost.

Neo-Quenya: In notes from the late 1960s, Tolkien introduced a new word háno for “brother” (VT47/14). However, I think toron might be retained to mean a “metaphorical brother”, a close male associate who may or may not be related by blood, as with such words as melotorni “love-brother, ✱close male friend” or ᴹQ. otorno “sworn brother”. In this sense, háno would be limited to biological relationships, but toron would refer to brotherly (or brother-like) affection.

Cognates

  • On. toron “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR
  • N. tôr “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR

Derivations

  • ᴹ√TOR “brother” ✧ Ety/THEL; Ety/TOR

Element in

  • ᴹQ. otorno “sworn brother, associate [m.]” ✧ Ety/TOR

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√TOR > toron[toron]✧ Ety/TOR
ᴹ√TOR > torni[toroni] > [torni]✧ Ety/TOR

Variations

  • toron- ✧ Ety/THEL
Qenya [Ety/THEL; Ety/TOR] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mitsa

adjective. small

Cognates

  • N. mithren “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT; EtyAC/MIT

Derivations

  • ᴹ✶mitra “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
    • ᴹ√MIT “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
  • ᴹ√MIT “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT

Element in

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ✶mitra > mitsa[mitra] > [mitsa]✧ EtyAC/MIT
ᴹ√MIT > minte[minte]✧ EtyAC/MIT

Variations

  • minte ✧ EtyAC/MIT (minte)

tet(ta)

noun. baby

A word in the Declension of Nouns of the early 1930s glossed “baby” with short and long variants tet and tetta (PE21/19).

Conceptual Development: The Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s had ᴱQ. tyetl “a tiny baby” under the early root ᴱ√TYETE “give suck” (QL/50), a word that also appeared in the Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa with the gloss “babe” (PME/50). This became ᴱQ. tetta “baby” in Early Qenya Word-lists of the 1920s (PE16/135), and finally tet/tetta in the Declension of Nouns of the early 1930s as noted above. There are no signs of this word thereafter.

Variations

  • tet ✧ PE21/19; PE21/24
  • tetta ✧ PE21/19
Qenya [PE21/19; PE21/24] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Doriathrin

aman

noun. mother

Ilkorin for “mother” (Ety/AM¹), also appearing in its plural form emnin (EtyAC/AM¹).

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. amil “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹
  • ᴹQ. amme “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹

Derivations

  • ᴹ√AM “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√AM¹ > aman[aman]✧ Ety/AM¹

Variations

  • emuin ✧ EtyAC/AM¹
Doriathrin [Ety/AM¹; EtyAC/AM¹] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Old Noldorin 

thele

noun. sister

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. seler “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL

Derivations

  • ᴹ√THEL(ES) “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
  • ᴹ✶thelese “*sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
    • ᴹ√THEL(ES) “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL

Derivatives

  • N. thêl “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL

Element in

  • On. wathel “[sworn] sister, associate [f.]” ✧ Ety/THEL

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√THELES > thele[tʰeles] > [θeles] > [θele]✧ Ety/THEL
ᴹ✶thelesi > thelehi[tʰelesi] > [θelesi] > [θelehi]✧ Ety/THEL
Old Noldorin [Ety/THEL] Group: Eldamo. Published by

toron

noun. brother

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. toron “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR

Derivations

  • ᴹ√TOR “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR

Derivatives

  • N. tôr “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR; Ety/TOR

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√TOR > toron[toron]✧ Ety/TOR
Old Noldorin [Ety/TOR] Group: Eldamo. Published by

wator

noun. brother

Cognates

  • ᴹQ. otorno “sworn brother, associate [m.]” ✧ Ety/TOR

Derivatives

  • N. gwador “(sworn) brother, associate” ✧ Ety/TOR
Old Noldorin [Ety/TOR] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Middle Primitive Elvish

lep

root. *finger

Derivatives

  • ᴹ✶lepti ✧ PE19/042
    • ᴹQ. lepse “finger” ✧ EtyAC/LEP; PE19/042

Element in

  • ᴹ√LEPEN “five” ✧ Ety/LEP
  • ᴹ√LEPET “finger” ✧ Ety/LEP
  • ᴹQ. Aldalemnar “Week of the Trees” ✧ Ety/GALAD; Ety/YEN

Variations

  • lep- ✧ PE19/042 (lep-)
Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/AR¹; Ety/GALAD; Ety/LEP; Ety/YEN; PE19/042] Group: Eldamo. Published by

lepet

root. finger

Derivatives

  • ᴹ✶lepti ✧ Ety/LEP
    • ᴹQ. lepse “finger” ✧ EtyAC/LEP; PE19/042
  • ᴹQ. lepse “finger” ✧ Ety/LEP
  • N. lhebed “finger” ✧ Ety/LEP
Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/LEP] Group: Eldamo. Published by

thel(es)

root. sister

Tolkien gave this root in The Etymologies of the 1930s as ᴹ√THEL and extended form ᴹ√THELES with the gloss “sister” and derivatives like ᴹQ. seler and N. thêl of the same meaning, both derived from the extended root as made clear by the Noldorin plural thelei < ON. thelehi (Ety/THEL). Hints of the roots continued use appear in the 1959 term Q. meletheldi “love-sisters” for close female friends (NM/20). In notes from the late 1960s, Tolkien gave Q. nésa and S. nethel as the words for “sister”, both from the root √NETH. Nevertheless, I think it is worth retaining ᴹ√THEL(ES) to represent more abstract notions of “sisterhood” for the purposes of Neo-Eldarin, for “metaphorical sister”s as opposed to Q. nésa/S. nethel for sisters by blood.

Derivatives

  • ᴹ✶thelese “*sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
    • On. thele “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
    • N. thêl “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
  • ᴹQ. seler “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
  • On. thele “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL
    • N. thêl “sister” ✧ Ety/THEL

Element in

  • Q. meletheldë “love-sister”
  • ᴹQ. oselle “[sworn] sister, associate [f.]” ✧ Ety/WŌ

Variations

  • THEL ✧ Ety/THEL; Ety/TOR; Ety/WŌ
  • THELES ✧ Ety/THEL
Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/THEL; Ety/TOR; Ety/WŌ] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mitra

adjective. small

Derivations

  • ᴹ√MIT “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT

Derivatives

  • ᴹQ. mitsa “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
  • N. mithren “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
Middle Primitive Elvish [EtyAC/MIT] Group: Eldamo. Published by

am

root. mother

Derivatives

  • Ilk. aman “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹
  • ᴹ✶amī̆l “mother”
    • ᴹQ. amil “mother”
    • N. emil “mother”
  • ᴹQ. amil “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹
  • ᴹQ. amme “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹
  • N. emil “mother” ✧ Ety/AM¹
Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/AM¹] Group: Eldamo. Published by

amī̆l

noun. mother

Derivations

  • ᴹ√AM “mother”

Derivatives

  • ᴹQ. amil “mother”
  • N. emil “mother”
Middle Primitive Elvish [PE21/66] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tor

root. brother

Tolkien gave this root in The Etymologies of the 1930s as ᴹ√TOR “brother” with derivatives like ᴹQ. toron and N. tôr of the same meaning (Ety/TOR). Hints of the roots continued use appear in the 1959 term Q. melotorni “love-brothers” for close male friends (NM/20). In notes from the late 1960s, Tolkien gave Q. háno and S. hanar as the words for “brother”, both from the root √KHAN. Nevertheless, I think it is worth retaining ᴹ√TOR to represent more abstract notions of “brotherhood” for the purposes of Neo-Eldarin, for “metaphorical” brothers as opposed to Q. háno/S. hanar for brothers by blood.

Derivatives

  • ᴺQ. otornië “company, association, alliance”
  • ᴹQ. toron “brother” ✧ Ety/THEL; Ety/TOR
  • On. toron “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR
    • N. tôr “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR; Ety/TOR

Element in

  • Q. melotorno “love-brother”
  • ᴹQ. otorno “sworn brother, associate [m.]” ✧ Ety/WŌ
  • On. wator “brother” ✧ Ety/TOR

Variations

  • tor ✧ Ety/THEL
Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/THEL; Ety/TOR; Ety/WŌ] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mit

root. small

A deleted root in The Etymologies of the 1930s glossed “small” with various Quenya and Noldorin derivatives of similar meaning (Ety/MIT).

Derivatives

  • ᴹ✶mitra “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
    • ᴹQ. mitsa “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
    • N. mithren “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
  • ᴹQ. mitsa “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
  • N. mithren “small” ✧ EtyAC/MIT
Middle Primitive Elvish [EtyAC/MIT] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Gnomish

leptha

noun. finger

Derivations

  • ᴱ√LEPE “*finger”

Element in

Gnomish [GG/13; GL/53] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ineg

adjective. small

inig

adjective. small

Cognates

Derivations

  • ᴱ√INI “small”

Element in

Variations

  • inc ✧ GL/18 (inc)
  • ineg ✧ GL/51
Gnomish [GL/18; GL/51] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hethir

noun. sister

A word for “sister” in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s, a feminized form of G. heth “brother or sister, ✱sibling”, along with several (archaic) variant forms hethwin, hestril, and hethril (GL/48). It was ultimately derived from the early root ᴱ√HESE [HEÞE?] (QL/40).

Cognates

Variations

  • hethwin ✧ GL/48 (hethwin)
  • hestril ✧ GL/48 (hestril)
  • hethril ✧ GL/48 (hethril)

aina

adjective. small

Variations

  • aina ✧ GL/18 (aina)

mabir

noun. mother

amaith

noun. mother

amil

noun. mother

Changes

  • anwin/amrilamaith ✧ GL/19
  • emaithamaith ✧ PE13/109

Element in

  • G. (m)ami “mummy” ✧ GL/19

Variations

  • amaith ✧ GL/19 (amaith); PE13/109
  • anwin/amril ✧ GL/19 (anwin/amril)
  • emaith ✧ PE13/109 (emaith)
Gnomish [GL/19; PE13/109] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mab(a)

noun. mother

Derivations

  • ᴱ√MAɃA “something nice” ✧ GL/57

Variations

  • maba ✧ GL/57
  • mabir ✧ GL/57
Gnomish [GL/29; GL/57] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nanwin

noun. mother

nân

noun. mother

Changes

  • nânnân “father” ✧ PE13/115

Variations

  • nân ✧ PE13/115; PE13/115 (nân)
  • nanwin ✧ PE13/115

hethos

noun. brother

A word for “brother” in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s, a masculinized form of G. heth “brother or sister, ✱sibling”, along with several (archaic?) variant forms {hethweg >>} hethwig, hestron, and hethron (GL/48-49). It was ultimately derived from the early root ᴱ√HESE [HEÞE?] (QL/40).

Changes

  • hethwighethweg ✧ GL/49

Cognates

Variations

  • hethweg ✧ GL/49 (hethweg)
  • hestron ✧ GL/49 (hestron)
  • hethron ✧ GL/49 (hethron)
  • hethwig ✧ GL/49 (hethwig)

puthli

noun. baby

A noun in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s glossed “baby” (GL/64), probably derived from the early root ᴱ√PU(HU) “generate” (QL/75).

Cognates

  • Eq. putse “baby, child”

Derivations

Early Noldorin

lhê

noun. finger

Derivations

  • ᴱ✶lept- ✧ PE13/148
    • ᴱ√LEPE “*finger” ✧ PE13/148
Early Noldorin [PE13/148] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ligen

adjective. small

lhigin

adjective. small

Early Primitive Elvish

lepe

root. *finger

Derivatives

  • ᴱ✶lept- ✧ PE13/148
    • En. lhê “finger” ✧ PE13/148
  • Eq. lempe “crook, hook” ✧ QL/053
  • Eq. lep- “to take”
  • Eq. let “finger” ✧ QL/053
  • Eq. lepsile “tendril” ✧ QL/053
  • Eq. lepta “hooked (as a tendril)” ✧ QL/053
  • G. leb- “to pick, pluck, take or feel or touch with fingers, cull”
  • G. leptha “finger”
  • G. lemp “crooked finger; little finger”
  • G. lempa- “to beckon, crook the finger”

Variations

  • lepe ✧ PE13/148
Early Primitive Elvish [PE13/148; QL/053] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ini

root. small

Derivatives

  • Eq. Inwe ✧ LT1A/Inwë
  • Eq. Inwir “Kindred of Inwë” ✧ QL/042
  • Eq. Inwilis “Faëry” ✧ LT1A/Inwë
  • Eq. Inwinóre “Fäery” ✧ LT1A/Inwë
  • Eq. inya “tiny” ✧ LT1A/Inwë; QL/042
  • G. inc “little”
  • G. im “fairy”
  • G. inig “small”
  • G. inthi “less”

Variations

  • în ✧ GL/18 (în)
Early Primitive Elvish [GL/18; LT1A/Inwë; QL/042] Group: Eldamo. Published by

olo

root. tip

A root in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s glossed “tip”, with derivatives like ᴱQ. óleme “elbow” and ᴱQ. ole “three” (QL/69). It seems to have served as the basis for ᴱ√LOHO, an early root for various flower words (QL/55). There are no signs that ᴱ√OLO was used for “tip” in Tolkien’s later writings (except perhaps in √OLOB “branch”), and ᴱ√LOHO evolved into √LOT(H) “flower”.

Derivatives

  • ᴱ✶oldō “cliff, seaward precipice”
    • G. ol “cliff, seaward precipice” ✧ GL/62
  • Eq. ole “three” ✧ LT1A/Lindelos; QL/069
  • Eq. olme(t) “nine” ✧ LT1A/Lindelos; QL/069
  • Eq. óleme “elbow” ✧ LT1A/Lindelos; QL/069
  • Eq. olet “forearm” ✧ QL/069
  • Eq. ollo “cliff, seaward precipice”

Element in

  • ᴱ√LOHO “*flower” ✧ LT1A/Lindelos; LT1A/Lindelos; QL/055; QL/055

Variations

  • OLO ✧ LT1A/Lindelos
  • olo ✧ QL/055; QL/055
Early Primitive Elvish [LT1A/Lindelos; QL/055; QL/069] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Early Quenya

lepta

noun. finger

Element in

Variations

  • lepta ✧ PE15/72; PE15/74; PE16/137
Early Quenya [PE15/72; PE15/74; PE16/137] Group: Eldamo. Published by

let

noun. finger

Derivations

  • ᴱ√LEPE “*finger” ✧ QL/053

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴱ√LEPE > let[lept] > [let]✧ QL/053
Early Quenya [PME/053; QL/053] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tenge

noun. finger

tenna

noun. finger

A noun for “finger” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s under the early root ᴱ√TENE “touch, feel” (QL/91). It was also mentioned in the contemporaneous Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa, but with -nd- written above it indicating a variant form tenda (PME/91). A similar word tenge “finger” appeared Early Qenya Word-lists of the 1920s (PE16/137), but ᴱQ. lepta was written next to it, perhaps as a replacement, since after this point finger-words were primarily based on √LEP.

Derivations

  • ᴱ√TENE “touch, feel” ✧ QL/091

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴱ√TENE > tenna[tennā] > [tenna]✧ QL/091

Variations

  • tenge ✧ PE16/137
Early Quenya [PE16/137; PME/091; QL/091] Group: Eldamo. Published by

heresse

noun. sister

A word for “sister” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s with numerous variants: heresse, hesta(noi)ni, and hestaqin, all based on the early root ᴱ√HESE that was the basis for “brother” and “sister” words (QL/40). Of these Tolkien said heresse was the “ordinary word”, and it also appeared in the Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa (PME/40).

Cognates

Early Quenya [PME/040; QL/040] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hestani

noun. sister

Variations

  • hestanoini ✧ QL/040
Early Quenya [QL/040] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hestanoini

noun. sister

hestaqin

noun. sister

Early Quenya [QL/040] Group: Eldamo. Published by

pínea

adjective. small

Element in

Variations

  • pīnea ✧ QL/073; QL/095
Early Quenya [QL/073; QL/095; VT40/08] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hestaner

noun. brother

Early Quenya [QL/040] Group: Eldamo. Published by

minwa

adjective. small

Derivations

  • ᴱ√MINI “*small, less” ✧ QL/061

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴱ√MINI > minwa[minwā] > [minwa]✧ QL/061
Early Quenya [QL/061] Group: Eldamo. Published by

(m)ambe

noun. mother

Variations

  • ambe ✧ PE16/135
  • mambe ✧ PE16/135
Early Quenya [PE16/135] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ama

noun. mother

Derivations

  • ᴱ√AMA “*mother” ✧ QL/030

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴱ√AMA > ama[amā] > [ama]✧ QL/030
Early Quenya [PME/030; QL/030] Group: Eldamo. Published by

amaimi

noun. mother

ambe

noun. mother

ambi

noun. mother

Derivations

  • ᴱ√AMA “*mother” ✧ QL/030

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴱ√AMA > âmi[āmī] > [āmi]✧ QL/030

Variations

  • ammi ✧ PME/030
  • amaimi ✧ PME/030; QL/030
  • âmi ✧ QL/030
Early Quenya [PME/030; QL/030] Group: Eldamo. Published by

amis

noun. mother

Derivations

  • ᴱ√AMA “*mother” ✧ QL/030

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴱ√AMA > amis[amits] > [amis]✧ QL/030
Early Quenya [PME/030; QL/030] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ammi

noun. mother

âmi

noun. mother

herendo

noun. brother

A word for “brother” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s with numerous variants: herendo or herēro, hestaner, and hesta(noi)nu, all based on the early root ᴱ√HESE that was the basis for “brother” and “sister” words (QL/40). Of these Tolkien said herendo/herēro was the “ordinary word”, and herendo appeared in the Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa (PME/40).

Cognates

Variations

  • herēro ✧ QL/040
Early Quenya [PME/040; QL/040] Group: Eldamo. Published by

heréro

noun. brother

hestanoinu

noun. brother

hestanu

noun. brother

Variations

  • hestanoinu ✧ QL/040
Early Quenya [QL/040] Group: Eldamo. Published by

pinilya

adjective. small

Derivations

  • ᴱ√PINI “*small”

Element in

Early Quenya [MC/220; PE16/076] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tetta

noun. baby

Early Quenya [PE16/135] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tyúte

noun. thumb

Derivations

  • ᴱ√TYU ✧ QL/050

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴱ√TYU > tyūte[tʲūti] > [tʲūte]✧ QL/050

Variations

  • tyūte ✧ QL/050; QL/093
Early Quenya [QL/050; QL/093] Group: Eldamo. Published by