Quenya 

hérë

lordship

hérë noun "lordship" (LT1:272)

adverb. here, here [ᴹQ.] (for both you and me), now

A word for “here” in notes from the late 1960s, derived from primitive ✶khĭn- (VT49/34). It seems to be part of an attempt to explain S. “now”.

Conceptual Development: Demonstrative, Relative, and Correlative Stems (DRC) from 1948 had a root √KHI that was a “demonstrative of 1st pers (b)”, that is “here by us” (PE23/96). It had a derived form ᴹQ. hi that could be used both spatially (“here by us”) and temporally (“now”). Primitive ✶khi was mentioned again in Eldarin Pronouns, Demonstratives, and Correlatives from the early 1950s, but the page where it appeared was deleted (PE23/131 note #31).

Neo-Quenya: For purposes of Neo-Quenya, I would assume Q. had a meaning similar to its 1948 sense “here by us”, as opposed to the more general word sissë for “here”. On the basis of this , I would also used the 1948 elaborations of ᴹQ. hi such as ᴹQ. hina “this (by us)” or ᴹQ. hillo “hence (from us)”

sissë

adverb. here

The words sís and sissë “here” appeared in a list of demonstratives from 1968 (VT49/18), combinations of si “this” and the locative suffix -ssë. Similarly formed ᴹQ. sisse “here” appeared in Demonstrative, Relative, and Correlative Stems (DRC) from 1948, also with a short variant sis (PE23/108, 111). It also had a longer variant {sinas(se) >>} sinis(se).

Quenya [VT49/18; VT49/23] Group: Eldamo. Published by

here

adv. "here" (VT49:34)

si

here

si adv. "here" (VT49:33; this may be a root or "element" rather than a Quenya word; see sissë, sinomë)

sissë

here

sissë adv. "here" (VT49:18), also sís

sís

here

sís adv. "here" (VT49:18, 23), also sissë

sís

adverb. here

hérë

noun. lordship

sinomë

adverb. here, (lit.) in this place

A word for “in this place” appearing in Elendil’s Oath (LotR/967). It also appeared in a list of demonstratives from 1968 with the glosses “in this place, here” (VT49/18), a combination of si “this” and nómë “place”. Similarly formed ᴹQ. {sinnome >>} sinome appeared in Demonstrative, Relative, and Correlative Stems (DRC) from 1948 (PE23/112).

Conceptual Development: Drafts of Elendil’s Oath from the 1940s had símane (SD/56), while Fíriel’s Song from the 1930s had ᴹQ. símen “here” (LR/72), where the second element was ᴹQ. men “place”.

Quenya [LotR/0967; PE17/067; PE17/103; PE22/147; VT44/33; VT44/35; VT49/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hyá

here by us

hyá adv.? "here by us" (Narqelion, QL:xiv)

mennen sís

I arrive[d] here

Quenya [VT49/23; VT49/24] Group: Eldamo. Published by

si

pronoun. this, here

The basic demonstrative “this” in Quenya, as in carnen si “I did this”. See the entry on demonstrative pronouns for further discusion.

Quenya [PE22/168; VT49/18; VT49/33] Group: Eldamo. Published by

au túlielde (las)!

if only you had come (were here)

men-

verb. go; come [to any point other than the ’here’ of the speaker]

Quenya [PE 22:162] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

símen

adverb. [here?; hither (VT 49:33)?]

Quenya [PE 22:147] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

tensi

adverb. already, still, up to now/here; yet [from present]

simen

adverb. hither

A word for “hither” appearing in a list of demonstratives from 1969 (VT49/33), a combination of si “this” and men “way”. The form sîmen appeared Late Notes on Verb Structure (LVS) from 1969 next to sinomë, so that context it might have meant “✱here, in this place”.

Quenya [PE22/147; VT49/33] Group: Eldamo. Published by

rísimandë

adverb. passim [Latin]; *scatteredly, here and there, at random

silussë

noun. present tense, (lit.) here-and-now-tense

A neologism coined by Luinyelle and Orondil on 2023-08-10, a combination of “now” and [ᴺQ.] lussë “(verb) tense”.

Quenya Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

an

for

an (1) _conj. and prep. _"for" (Nam, RGEO:66), an cé mo quernë… "for if one turned…" (VT49:8), also used adverbially in the formula an + a noun to express "one more" (of the thing concerned: an quetta "a word more", PE17:91). The an of the phrase es sorni heruion an! "the Eagles of the Lords are at hand" (SD:290) however seems to denote motion towards (the speaker): the Eagles are coming. Etym has an, ana "to, towards" (NĀ1). The phrase an i falmalī _(PE17:127) is not clearly translated but seems to be a paraphrase of the word falmalinnar "upon the foaming waves" (Nam)_, suggesting that an can be used as a paraphrase of the allative ending (and if falmalī is seen as a Book Quenya accusative form because of the long final vowel, this is evidence that an governs the accusative case). In the "Arctic" sentence, an is translated "until". Regarding an as used in Namárië, various sources indicate that it means an "moreover, further(more), to proceed" (VT49:18-19) or ("properly") "further, plus, in addition" (PE17:69, 90). According to one late source (ca. 1966 or later), an "is very frequently used after a full stop, when an account or description is confirmed after a pause. So in Galadriels Elvish lament […]: An sí Tintallë, etc. [= For now the Kindler, etc…] This is translated by me for, side an is (as here) often in fact used when the additional matter provides an explanation of or reason for what has already been said". Related is the use of an + noun to express "one more"; here an is presumably accented, something the word would not normally be when used as a conjunction or preposition.

men-

verb. go

#men- (4) vb. "go" (VT47:11, cf. VT42:30, VT49:23), attested in the aorist (menë) in the sentence imbi Menel Cemenyë menë Ráno tië "between Heaven and Earth goes the path of the Moon". In the verb nanwen- "return" (or go/come back), -men- is changed to -wen- following nan- "back" (etymological form cited as nan-men-, PE17:166). In examples from VT49:23, 24, Tolkien used men- in the sense of "go as far as": 1st person sg. aorist menin (menin coaryanna "I arrive at [or come/get to] his house"), endingless aorist menë, present tense ména- "is on point of arrival, is just coming to an end", past tense mennë "arrived, reached", in this tense usually with locative rather than allative (mennen sís "I arrive[d] here"), perfect eménië "has just arrived", future menuva "will arrive". All of these examples were first written with the verb as ten- rather than men-, Tolkien then emending the initial consonant.

nandë

valley

nandë (1) noun "valley" in Laurenandë (UT:253), elided nand in the name Nand Ondoluncava (k") "Stonewain Valley" (PE17:28). Possibly the complete word is here meant to be the variant nando (PE17:80), as suggested by the alternative form Ondoluncanan(do) ("k") "Stonewain Valley". Also nan, nand- noun "valley" (Letters:308); Nan-Tasarion "Vale of Willows" (LotR2:III ch. 4) (Note that this and the next nandë would be spelt differently in Tengwar writing, and originally they were also pronounced differently, since nandë "harp" was ñandë in First Age Quenya.)

ne

that

ne (2) conj. "that" (as in "I know that you are here") (PE14:54), evidently replaced by i in Tolkiens later Quenya (see i #3).

is

(1) vb. "is" (am). (Nam, RGEO:67). This is the copula used to join adjectives, nouns or pronouns "in statements (or wishes) asserting (or desiring) a thing to have certain quality, or to be the same as another" (VT49:28). Also in impersonal constructions: ringa ná "it is cold" (VT49:23). The copula may however be omitted "where the meaning is clear" without it (VT49:9). is also used as an interjection "yes" or "it is so" (VT49:28). Short na in airë [] na, "[] is holy" (VT43:14; some subject can evidently be inserted in the place of [].) Short na also functions as imperative: alcar mi tarmenel na Erun "glory in high heaven be to God" (VT44:32/34), also na airë "be holy" (VT43:14); also cf. nai "be it that" (see nai #1). The imperative participle á may be prefixed (á na, PE17:58). However, VT49:28 cites as the imperative form. Pl. nar or nár "are" (PE15:36, VT49:27, 9, 30); dual nát (VT49:30). With pronominal endings: nányë/nanyë "I am", nalyë or natyë "you (sg.) are" (polite and familiar, respectively), nás "it is", násë "(s)he is", nalmë "we are" (VT49:27, 30). Some forms listed in VT49:27 are perhaps to be taken as representing the aorist: nain, naityë, nailyë (1st person sg, and 2nd person familiar/polite, respectively); does a following na represent the aorist with no pronominal ending? However, the forms nanyë, nalyë, , nassë, nalme, nar (changed from nár) are elsewhere said to be "aorist", without the extra vowel i (e.g. nalyë rather than nailyë); also notice that *"(s)he is" is here nassë rather than násë (VT49:30).Pa.t. nánë or "was", pl. náner/nér and dual nét "were" (VT49:6, 9, 10, 27, 28, 30, 36). According to VT49:31, "was" cannot receive pronominal endings (though nésë "he was" is attested elsewhere, VT49:28-29), and such endings are rather added to the form ane-, e.g. anen "I was", anel "you were", anes "(s)he/it was" (VT49:28-29). Future tense nauva "will be" (VT42:34, VT49:19, 27; another version however gives the future tense as uva, VT49:30). Nauva with a pronominal ending occurs in tanomë nauvan "I will be there" (VT49:19), this example indicating that forms of the verb may also be used to indicate position. Perfect anaië "has been" (VT49:27, first written as anáyë). Infinitive (or gerund) návë "being", PE17:68. See also nai #1.

simen

hither

simen adv. "hither" (VT49:33), símen "here" (FS; cf. sinomë in EO). Compare tamen.

sinomë

this place

sinomë compound noun "this place" (EO), used as adverb (or uninflected locative) = "in this place" = "here" (VT49:18). Variant sínomë (VT44:36). Cf. sanomë, tanomë.

now

adv. "now" (Nam, RGEO:67, LR:47, SD:310, VT43:34, VT49:18, PE17:94), sin (SI, LR:47) or sín _(SD:247, 310) _before vowels. Compare the distribution of a/an in English, though in his Quenya version of Hail Mary, Tolkien used also before a vowel (sí ar "now and", VT43:28). Si, a short (or incompletely annotated) form of (VT43:26, 34). In Fíriel's Song, is translated "here".

sívë

as

sívë (1) prep. "as", apparently ve of similar meaning with the prefix - "this, here, now"; sívë therefore makes a comparison with something close, whereas tambë (q.v.) refers to something remote. Sívë...tambë "as...so" (VT43:17). Elided sív' in VT43:12, since the next word begins in the vowel e-.

ten-

verb. go as far as

[ten- (3) vb. "go as far as", 1st person sg. aorist tenin, (tenin coaryanna "I arrive at [or come/get to] his house"), endingless aorist tenë, present tense téna- "is on point of arrival, is just coming to an end", past tense tennë "arrived, reached", in this tense usually with locative rather than allative: tennen sís "I arrive[d] here", perfect eténië "has just arrived", future tenuva "will arrive".] (VT49:23, 35, 36; Tolkien emended the initial consonant from t to m throughout)

úyë

is

úyë vb., a form occurring in Fíriel's Song (cf. VT46:22), apparently ye "is" with the negative prefix ú-, hence "is not" (úyë sérë indo-ninya símen, translated "my hearth resteth not here", literally evidently *"[there] is not rest [for] my heart here")

sina

this

A word for “this” appearing in Cirion’s Oath (UT/305). It also appeared in a list of demonstratives from 1968 as an adjectival form of si “this” (VT49/18), and appeared again in notes on the Common Eldarin Article (CEA) from 1969 (PE23/135). Similarly formed ᴹQ. sina appeared in Demonstrative, Relative, and Correlative Stems (DRC) from 1948 (PE23/104-105) where it could also be used both adjectivally (“this”) and substantively (“this fact”).

Conceptual Development: In the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s had ᴱQ. táma for “this” rather than “that” (QL/87); compare ᴱQ. ena “that by you” (QL/34). The Early Qenya Grammar (EQG) of the 1920s had {qinta >>} ᴱQ. qinda “this” (PE14/55), but a sentence in contemporaneous Qenya Word-lists seems to have sinda for “this” (PE16/146).

Quenya [CPT/1296; PE23/135; UT/305; VT49/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

adverb. now

The Quenya word for “now” which is very well attested. In notes on demonstratives from 1968, it is a vowel-lengthened form of demonstrative si “this” (VT49/18) which seems to be a standard way of forming adverbs of time in Tolkien’s later writings; compare “then” (VT49/11) and “when” (VT49/23). This vowel-lengthening construction was explicitly described in Demonstrative, Relative, and Correlative Stems (DRC) from 1948: “The bare stems lengthened are used [for adverbs of time]” (PE23/109).

In Tolkien’s writings from the 1930s and 40s, he occasionally had sin or sín “now” with an n (Ety/SIN; LR/47; SD/247; SD/310). One working theory is that this is the form of when it appears before a vowel. However, in the aforementioned DRC from 1948, Tolkien had a variant form ᴹQ. sin(an) “now” using the suffix ᴹQ. -n(an), also used for adverbs of time.

Conceptual Development: The Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s had ᴱQ. tyá “now” based on the early root ᴱ√KI “this by me” (QL/46, 49). In the Early Qenya Grammar (EQG) from the 1920s he had ᴱQ. or qin for adverbs of time based ᴱQ. qi “this”, hence = “✱now”. However, the untranslated text Sí Qente Feanor from the 1910s seems to use = “now” (PE15/32, 34).

Neo-Quenya: For purposes of Neo-Quenya, I would mostly use “now”, but I would also use sín or sin in cases where the results are more euphonic, particularly preceding a word starting with a vowel.

Quenya [CPT/1298; LotR/0377; Minor-Doc/2013-05-13; PE17/027; PE17/045; PE17/067; PE17/069; PE17/070; PE17/094; PE17/127; PE22/147; PE22/161; PE23/135; RGEO/58; RGEO/59; RGEO/60; VT21/06; VT43/34; VT49/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tana

that

A word for “that” appearing in a list of demonstratives from 1968, an adjectival form of ta “that” (VT49/11). This adjective also appeared in notes on the Common Eldarin Article (CEA) from 1969 (PE23/135). Similarly formed ᴹQ. tana appeared in Demonstrative, Relative, and Correlative Stems (DRC) from 1948 (PE23/85, 104-105) where it could also be used both adjectivally (“that”) and substantively (“that fact”). ᴹQ. tana “that” also appeared in The Etymologies of the 1930s but in that document Tolkien said it was “anaphoric” (Ety/TA), as opposed to later when Q. sana was used for anaphoric that (PE16/97; PE23/104).

Conceptual Development: In the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, ᴱQ. táma was “this” rather than “that” (QL/87). The Early Qenya Grammar (EQG) of the 1920s had ᴱQ. {santa >>} sanda “that” (PE14/55), but drafts of the ᴱQ. Oilima Markirya poem from around 1930 seem to have tanda for “that” (PE16/56-57, 60).

Quenya [PE23/135; VT49/11] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-ië

suffix. is

- (3) "is", -ier "are", stative verb suffix occurring in Fíriel's Song: númessier "they are in the west", meldielto "they are...beloved", talantië "he is fallen", márië "it is good" (< *númessë "in the west", melda "beloved", *talanta "fallen"); future tense -iéva in hostainiéva "will be gathered" (< *hostaina "gathered"). Compare ye "is", yéva "will be", verbs that also occur in Fíriel's Song. This suffix is probably not valid in LotR-style Quenya: - is an infinitival or gerundial ending in CO, for ye "is" Namárië has , and the phrase "lost is" is vanwa ná, not *vanwië.

lelya-

verb. go, proceed (in any direction), travel

lelya- (1) vb. "go, proceed (in any direction), travel", pa.t. lendë / elendë (WJ:363, VT14:5, PE17:139) At one point Tolkien assigned a more specific meaning to the underlying root LED: "go away from the speaker or the point in mind, depart" (PE17:52), which would make lelya- a near synonym of auta-. The same source denies that the derivatives of _LED _were used simply for "go, move, travel", but elsewhere Tolkien assigns precisely that meaning to lelya-.

ta

that, it

ta (1) pron. "that, it" (TA); compare antaróta** "he gave it" (FS); see anta-. The forms tar/tara/tanna "thither", talo/ "thence" and tás/tassë* "there" are originally inflected forms of this pronoun: "to that", "from that" and "in that" (place), respectively. Compare "there" as one gloss of ta (see #4).

sir(a)

adverb. hither

An (archaic?) word for “hither” appearing in a list of demonstratives from 1968, based on primitive ✶sidā̆ with the ancient allative suffix ✶-da (VT49/18).

-vë

as, like

-, (3) apparently an ending used to derive adverbs from adjectives (see andavë under anda and oiavë under oia). May be related to the preposition ve "as, like".

Nando

valley, wide valley

nando (2) "valley, wide valley", variant of nandë #1, q.v. (PE17:80)

au

away

au (2) adv. "away", of position rather than movement (compare oa). PE17:148

heru-

verb. to rule

heru- vb. "to rule" (LT1:272; rather tur- in LotR-style Quenya)

hó-

away, from, from among

- verbal prefix; "away, from, from among", the point of view being outside the thing, place, or group in thought (WJ:368)

i

pronoun. that

Quenya [PE 22:124] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

i, antevokaliskt in

conjunction. that

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

ier

as

ier prep. "as" (VT43:16, probably rejected in favour of sívë, q.v.). In an abandoned version of the Quenya Lord's Prayer, Tolkien used ier...ter for "as...so" (VT43:17).

lenna-

verb. go

lenna- vb. "go", pa.t. lendë "went" (LED; cf. lelya-). In the Etymologies as printed in LR, the word lenna- wrongly appears as **linna-; see VT45:27.

nalda

valley

nalda adj. "valley" (used as an adjective), also "lowly" (LT1:261, QL:66)$

nandë

noun. valley

sa

conjunction. that

Quenya [PE 22:119] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

sana

that

Quenya [PE 22:116] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

savin elessar ar <u>i</u> nánë aran ondórëo

that

i (3) conj. "that". Savin Elessar ar i nánë aran Ondórëo "I believe that Elessar really existed and that [he] was a king of Gondor" (VT49:27), savin…i E[lesarno] quetië naitë *"I believe that Elessars speaking [is] true" (VT49:28) Also cf. nai, nái "be it that" (see nai #1), which may seem to incorporate this conjunction.

sin

now

sin (2) adv., a form of "now" (q.v.) often occurring before vowels; also sín (SI). However, itself (q.v.) may also appear before a vowel.

sina

this

sina demonstrative "this" (following its noun in our sole example: vanda sina "this oath"). (CO, VT49:18; in the latter source, sina _is called an adjective). _This word would, like Sindarin hen, be derived from primitive ¤sĭnā (VT49:34). Cf. sin #1.

sir

hither

sir (2), also sira, adv. "hither" (primitive ¤sida, ¤sidā) (VT49:18)

adverb. now

Quenya [PE 22:126; PE 22:147] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

sír

adverb. now

tana

that

tana (1) demonstrative "that" (said to be "anaphoric") (TA). According to VT49:11, tana is the adjective corresponding to ta, "that" as a pronoun.

tanya

that

tanya demonstrative "that" (MC:215; this is "Qenya", perhaps corresponding to later tana)

ten

for

ten (2) conj. "for", in Fíriel's Song; apparently replaced by an in LotR-style Quenya.

tul-

verb. come

tul- vb. "come" (WJ:368), 1st pers. aorist tulin "I come" (TUL), 3rd pers. sg. tulis "(s)he comes" (VT49:19), perfect utúlië "has come" (utúlien "I am come", EO), utúlie'n aurë "Day has come" (the function of the 'n is unclear; it may be a variant of the article "the", hence literally "the Day has come"). Past tense túlë "came" in LR:47 and SD:246, though an alternative form *tullë has also been theorized. Túlë in VT43:14 seems to be an abnormal aorist stem, later abandoned; tula in the same source would be an imperative. Prefixed future tense entuluva "shall come again" in the Silmarillion, future tuluva also in the phrase aranielya na tuluva* "may thy kingdom come" (VT44:32/34), literally apparently "thy kingdom, be-it-that (it) will come". In early "Qenya" we have the perfects tulielto "they have come" (LT1:114, 270, VT49:57) and tulier "have come", pl., in the phrase I·Eldar tulier "the Eldar have come"(LT1:114, 270). Read probably utúlieltë, Eldar utúlier** in LotR-style Quenya.

tul-

verb. come

Quenya [PE 22:99ff,103,118,122; PE 22:162] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

vala-

verb. to rule

vala- (2) vb. "to rule", only with reference to the Valar (see Vala). Future tense valuva is attested (WJ:404)

vanya-

verb. go, depart, disappear

vanya- (2) vb. "go, depart, disappear", pa.t. vannë (WAN). The verb auta- may have replaced this word in Tolkien's later conception.

ve

as, like

ve (1) prep. "as, like" (Nam, RGEO:66, Markirya, MC:213, 214, VT27:20, 27, VT49:22); in Narqelion ve may mean either "in" or "as". Ve fírimor quetir *"as mortals say" (VT49:10), ve senwa (or senya) "as usual" (VT49:10). Followed by genitive, ve apparently expresses "after the manner of": ve quenderinwë coaron ("k") "after the manner of bodies of Elven-kind" (PE17:174). Tolkien variously derived Quenya ve from older , or vai(VT49:10, 32, PE17:189)

ya

as

ya (2) or yan, prep. "as" (VT43:16, probably abandoned in favour of sívë)

yana

that

yana demonstrative "that" (the former) (YA)

ye

is

ye (2) copula "is" (FS, VT46:22); both earlier and later sources rather point to (q.v.) as the copula "is", so ye may have been an experiment Tolkien later abandoned. Future tense yéva, q.v.

ye

as

[ye (3), also , prep. "as" (VT43:16, struck out; in the text in question Tolkien finally settled on sívë, q.v.)]

epello

adverb. already

Quenya Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

nollo

adverb. already

Quenya Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

Sindarin 

adverb. here

adv. here. Q. now, here (usually 'now').

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:27:67:94:127] < SĬ, SĬN position of speaker, 'this'. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

adverb. here

Sindarin [LotR/II:I, RGEO/72] Group: SINDICT. Published by

adverb. here

Sindarin [PE 22:147] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

si loth a galadh lasto dîn

*here flower and tree listen [in] silence

The third phrase of Lúthien’s Song (LB/354). Three translations of this phrase are:

  • Patrick Wynne: “✱Here/now let flower and tree listen in silence/below” (NTTLS/11)

  • David Salo: “✱now flower and tree, listen silent” (GS/211)

  • Bertrand Bellet and Benjamin Babut: “✱then flower and tree, listen in silence” (GTLC)

The first word si resembles the Sindarin word “here”, though that word usually appears with a long vowel. All of Wynne, Salo, Bellet and Babut suggested instead that it might in this particular case be used temporally like its Quenya cognate Q. “now”. However, in notes published after all of their analyses, Tolkien stated that S. only meant “here”, and used for “now” (PE17/27). I think it is safer to assume that si means “here”.

The second word is loth “flower” joined by the conjunction a “and” to galadh “tree”. The fifth word lasto is the imperative form of the verb lasta- “to listen”. The last word is probably the noun dîn “silence”, though Wynne suggested it might be some form of di “beneath” (NTTLS/9).

le nallon sí di’nguruthos

here overwhelmed in dread of Death I cry

Sindarin [Let/278; LotR/0729; PE17/021; PE17/087; PE17/094; RGEO/64] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nef aear, sí nef aearon

here ... beyond the Sea, beyond the wide and sundering Sea

Sindarin [LotR/0238; Minor-Doc/1966-01-15; PE17/020; PE17/021; RGEO/63; RGEO/64] Group: Eldamo. Published by

adverb. here, in this place (of speaker)

Sindarin [LB/354; LotR/0238; LotR/0729; PE17/027; PE17/067; PE17/094; PE17/127; PE22/147; RGEO/63; RGEO/64; VT49/34] Group: Eldamo. Published by

here

here

imloth

noun. flower-valley, flowery vale

This word only occurs in the place name Imloth Melui, a vale where roses grew

Sindarin [LotR/V:VIII, VT/42:18, RC/582] im+loth. Group: SINDICT. Published by

adverb. now

Sindarin [LotR/0307; PE17/027; PE17/045; PE17/127; PE22/147; VT49/34; VT50/15; VT50/22] Group: Eldamo. Published by

se

pronoun. this

Sindarin Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

taw

pronoun. that

Sindarin Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

han

that

pl1. hain _pron. _that, the thing previously mentioned. Tolkien notes "hain = heinn (< san-)" (PE17:42). Im Narvi hain echant 'I Narvi made them'.

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:42] < pl1. _hein_. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

hen

pronoun. this

pl1. hin _ dem. pron. _this.

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:44] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

hi

adverb. now

_ adv. _now. annon edhellen edro hi ammen! 'Elvish gate open now for us'.

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:45] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

hin

adverb. now

now

_adv. _now. Q. . thî/ << . >> thî****

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:27:127] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

im

noun. valley, valley; [N.] dell, deep vale

An archaic element meaning “valley” that survived only in compounds, a derivation of ✶imbi “between” (VT47/14). The basic sense “valley” was transferred to its more elaborate form imlad as in Imladris “Rivendell”, and †im “valley” fell out of use due to its conflicted with other words like the reflexive pronoun im.

Conceptual Development: N. imm “dell, deep vale” was mentioned in The Etymologies of the 1930s as a derivative of the root ᴹ√IMBE, alongside its elaboration N. imlad of the same meaning (Ety/IMBE).

Sindarin [VT42/18; VT47/14] Group: Eldamo. Published by

imlad

noun. deep valley, narrow valley with steep sides (but a flat habitable bottom)

Sindarin [S/433, LotR/Index, VT/45:18, VT/47:14, RC/234,48] im+lad. Group: SINDICT. Published by

imrad

noun. a path or pass (between mountains, hills or trackless forest)

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

imrath

noun. long narrow valley with a road or watercourse running through it lengthwise

Sindarin [UT/465, RC/558] im+rath. Group: SINDICT. Published by

san

pronoun. that

Sindarin [LotR/0305; PE17/042] Group: Eldamo. Published by

sen

adjective. this

This demonstrative adjective is probably enclitic. We have suggested that this possibility could perhaps explain why the mutated form of tîw on the Doors of Durin is thiw instead of the expected thîw, see HL/69

Sindarin [i thiw hin LotR/II:IV] Group: SINDICT. Published by

sen

pronoun. this

pl1. sín {ī}_ dem. pron. _this.

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:44] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

sen

pronoun. this

Sindarin [LotR/0305; PE17/044; VT49/34; VT50/14; VT50/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

si

adverb. now

Sindarin [LotR/IV:X, LB/354] Group: SINDICT. Published by

sui

conjunction. as, like

Sindarin [VT/44:21,27] Group: SINDICT. Published by

sí(r)

adverb. now

sîr

adverb. now

Sindarin [PE 22:147] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

thî

now

_adv. _now. Q. . thî/ << . >> hî****

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:27] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

thî

adverb. now

tolo

verb. come!

Sindarin [VT/44:21,25] Group: SINDICT. Published by

tum

noun. deep valley, under or among hills

Sindarin [Ety/394, S/438] Group: SINDICT. Published by

ammen

for us

(to us).

an

for

(prep.) an (+ nasal mutation), with article ni ”for the” (+ nasal mutation in plural).

an

for

(adverbial prefix) an-

an

for

(+ nasal mutation), with article ’ni ”for the” (+ nasal mutation in plural).

an

for the

(for) + i (the).

bad

go

#bad- (i vâd, i medir), pa.t. bant. Isolated from trevad- ”traverse”.

bad

go

(i vâd, i medir), pa.t. bant. Isolated from trevad- ”traverse”.

be

as

(like, according to). Followed by lenition? With article ben (followed by "mixed mutation" according to David Salo’s reconstruction)

e

away

ed (out, forth); also as adjectival prefix "outer" and preposition "out from, out of" (WJ:367)

gwa

adverb. away

gwachae

away

  1. (adj.) gwachae (remote), lenited wachae, no distinct pl. form. The form occurring in the primary source, #gwahae, must represent the late Gondorian pronunciantion with h for ch (PM:186, isolated from gwahaedir). 2) (adv.) e, ed (out, forth); also as adjectival prefix "outer" and preposition "out from, out of" (WJ:367)

gwachae

away

(remote), lenited ’wachae, no distinct pl. form. The form occurring in the primary source, #gwahae, must represent the late Gondorian pronunciantion with h for ch *(PM:186, isolated from gwahaedir)*.         

i

that

(+ soft mutation), basically in in the plural, but often loses the n which is then replaced by nasal mutation of the next consonant (e.g. gyrth i chuinar ”dead that live [cuinar]”, Letters:417). Sometimes i (+ soft mutation) is used in the singular as well. – The form ai (following by lenition) occurs in the phrase di ai gerir ✱”those who do” (VT44:23). Possibly it is a form of the relative pronoun that is used when the previous word ends in -i. Whether ai is both sg. and pl. is unclear; in its one attestation it is followed by a plural verb that is lenited.

imloth

flowering valley

(pl. imlyth) (VT42:18).

imrath

valley

(long narrow valley with a road or watercourse running through it lengthwise) imrath (pl. imraith)

lâd

valley

(lowland, plain), construct lad, pl. laid

nand

valley

  1. nand (construct nan) (wide grassland, land at the foot of hills with many streams), pl. naind, coll. pl. nannath (VT45:36), 2) lâd (lowland, plain), construct lad, pl. laid, 3) (long narrow valley with a road or watercourse running through it lengthwise) imrath (pl. imraith).

nand

valley

(construct nan) (wide grassland, land at the foot of hills with many streams), pl. naind, coll. pl. **nannath **(VT45:36)

nev

hither

(adj. pref.) nev- (near, on this side). Also used as a preposition nef ”on this side of”.

nev

hither

(near, on this side). Also used as a preposition nef ”on this side of”.

sa

pronoun. that

Sindarin Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

sen

this

*sen, lenited hen. Only attested in lenited pl. form hin* (unlenited sin) ”these” in the Moria Gate inscription (i thiw hin**, ”these letters”).

sen

this

lenited hen. Only attested in lenited pl. form hin (unlenited ✱sin) ”these” in the Moria Gate inscription (i thiw hin, ”these letters”).

si

now

si (lenited hi)

si

now

(lenited hi)

sui

as

  1. prep. “like, as”) sui (VT44:23), 2) (prep.) be (like, according to). Followed by lenition? With article ben (followed by "mixed mutation" according to David Salos reconstruction)

sui

as

(VT44:23)

talath

wide valley

(i** dalath, o thalath) (flat surface, plane, flatlands, plain), pl. telaith (i** thelaith). *Tolkien changed this word from ”Noldorin” dalath, LR:353 s.v.*

talath

dal

Dirnen or ”Guarded Plain” mentioned in the Silmarillion.

taw

that

(demonstrative pronoun) ?taw. _Only the ”Old Noldorin” form is actually given in LR:389 s.v. _

taw

that

. Only the ”Old Noldorin” form is actually given in LR:389 s.v.

tol

come

tol- (i dôl, i thelir). The present tense tôl is attested (WJ:254). MAKE COME, see FETCH

tol

come

(i dôl, i thelir). The present tense tôl is attested (WJ:254).

Primitive elvish

si

root. this, this, [ᴹ√] here, now

Tolkien used √SI as the basis for “near demonstratives” like “here” and “now” from very early in his writings on Elvish. The Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s had two competing roots ᴱ√HYA “this by us” with derivatives like ᴱQ. hyá “here by us” (QL/41) and ᴱ√KI “this by me” with derivative ᴱQ. tyá (< ᴱ✶kı̯-ā) “now” (QL/41, 49). Indications of the latter can be seen words in the contemporaneous Gnomish Lexicon such as G. {“now” >>} “here” and G. cîrin “present (place or time), modern” [gloss deleted] (GL/26). However, Tolkien also introduced a new root ᴱ√si(n) “this here by me” with derivatives like G. “here” and G. sith “hither” (GL/68). Revisions of Gnomish ci- word glosses indicate Tolkien was vacillating on which forms were temporal and which were spatial.

In The Etymologies Tolkien gave the root ᴹ√SI “this, here, now” with derivatives like ᴹQ. or sin “now” and ᴹQ. sinya/N. sein “new” (Ety/SI). The root √SI was mentioned a couple times in Tolkien’s later writings, usually glossed “this” (PE17/67; VT48/25; VT49/18) and in one place with the variant √SIN (PE17/67). This root was not entirely without competition in Tolkien’s later notes, however: in one place he gave primitive ✶khĭn- as the possible basis for Q. “here” and S. “now” in 1968 notes on demonstratives, though it appeared beside primitive ✶si- forms (VT49/34 note #21).

Primitive elvish [PE17/067; PE17/184; VT48/25] Group: Eldamo. Published by

khĭn-

adverb. *here, now

Primitive elvish [VT49/34] Group: Eldamo. Published by

adverb. now or here

Primitive elvish [PE17/067] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tul-

verb. come, is coming, has come, is here, I come, have come

Primitive elvish [PE17/099; PE22/129; PE22/130; PE22/131; PE22/140; PE23/121; PE23/128] Group: Eldamo. Published by

si

pronoun. this (by me)

Primitive elvish [PE23/130; PE23/131; PE23/132; PE23/135; VT49/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

au-

prefix. away

Primitive elvish [WJ/361] Group: Eldamo. Published by

awa-

prefix. away

Primitive elvish [PE17/144; WJ/360; WJ/365] Group: Eldamo. Published by

awā

adverb. away

Primitive elvish [WJ/361; WJ/366] Group: Eldamo. Published by

san-

pronoun. that

Primitive elvish [PE17/042] Group: Eldamo. Published by

sidā̆

adverb. hither

Primitive elvish [VT49/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

sin

root. this

sinā

adjective. this

Primitive elvish [PE17/044; PE23/135; VT49/18; VT49/34] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Adûnaic

îdô

adverb. now

A word translated “now” in the Lament of Akallabêth (SD/247). In the final manuscript version, this is the only form of the word, but in the final typescript version and in all earlier versions, it sometimes appears in the form îdôn.

Some authors have suggested this variation occurs when îdô appears before words beginning in a vowel or semi-vowel (AL/Adûnaic, NBA/12), but this seems unlikely to me. Carl Hostetter, Patrick Wynne and Andreas Moehn instead suggested (VSH/18, AAD/16, LGtAG, EotAL/DAW) that îdôn is a subjective inflection of the word îdô, being used as a noun. The key evidence supporting this second theory is that where the form îdon appears, its gloss is always “now (is)” rather than simply “now”. As discussed elsewhere (SD/429), the subjective inflection can function as the verb “to be”.

I tend to agree with this theory of Hostetter, Wynne and Moehn, but I think the actually development is somewhat more complex. In the first draft version of the Lament of Akallabêth, this form of the word appears twice as īdōn “lo! now is”. As noted by Mr. Moehn (LGtAG), this version of the Lament used a predicate suffix -n “is” in several places: burodan “heavy-is”, rōkhī-nam “bent-are”. It seems likely that draft form īdōn “lo! now is” is another variation of this earlier syntax.

The draft predicate suffix -n differed from the later subjective case in that it applied to the predicate of a clause instead of the subject. Compare these changes from the draft to final versions:

In both draft sentences, the subject is uninflected and the predicate has the predicate suffix -n/-nam. Conversely, in the later sentences the subject is inflected into the subjective case while the predicate is uninflected. This demonstrates the functional shift in the use of the predicate suffix -n in these drafts to the later use of the subjective inflection.

In both the second draft and final typescript versions of the Lament, the form îdôn was retained in all the sentences where it appeared in the first draft. This means that it could have been a remnant of this earlier syntax. The form îdôn could be reinterpreted as the sentence’s subject, but this is also problematic, since îdô is certainly neuter and its subjective form should be ✱îdôwa, not îdôn.

It is my belief that Tolkien eventually decided that the suffix -n could no longer be used in this context and removed it, switching to an uninflected îdô “now” everywhere in the text as is the case in the final manuscript version of the Lament. On the basis of this deduction, I also believe that the manuscript version was written after than the typescript version.

Adûnaic [SD/247; SD/288; SD/312] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-ak Reconstructed

preposition. away

A suffix in the word êphalak “far away”, a derivative of êphal “far” (SD/247). Some authors have suggested that -ak is an intensive suffix “very” instead of suffix meaning “away” (LGtAG, NBA/32). However, the corresponding Quenya word vahai(y)a “far away” is a combination va “(away) from” and haiya “far”, so it seems to me that the literal translation “away” is more likely to be correct (this translation of va was published after LGtAG and NBA were written).

Noldorin 

imlad

noun. deep valley, narrow valley with steep sides (but a flat habitable bottom)

Noldorin [S/433, LotR/Index, VT/45:18, VT/47:14, RC/234,48] im+lad. Group: SINDICT. Published by

then

pronoun. this

tol-

verb. to come

Noldorin [Ety/395] Group: SINDICT. Published by

tum

noun. deep valley, under or among hills

Noldorin [Ety/394, S/438] Group: SINDICT. Published by

Khuzdûl

duban

noun. valley

Telerin 

au

adverb. away

au-

prefix. away

Nandorin 

nand

noun. valley

Isolated from Lindórinand, Lórinand (q.v. for reference). While this word is not given in the Etymologies, it is clearly derived from the stem NAD (LR:374) and hence a close cognate of the similar Doriathrin word nand "field, valley". The Quenya cognate nanda (meaning "water-mead, watered plain") indicates a primitive form *nandâ; as in most cases, the final is lost in Nandorin.

Nandorin [H. Fauskanger (LR:374)] < NAD. 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!

Early Quenya

hére

noun. lordship

Early Quenya [LT1A/Valahíru; QL/040; QL/070] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hyá

adverb. here by us

Early Quenya [QL/041; VT40/08] Group: Eldamo. Published by

n·alalmino hyá lanta lasse

*from the elm-tree here a leaf falls

Early Quenya [VT40/08] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ike

adjective. this

Early Quenya [QL/041] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tyá

adverb. now

Early Quenya [QL/049] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ne

conjunction. that

Early Quenya [PE14/052; PE14/054; PE14/085] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-víke

suffix. as

Early Quenya [PE15/69; QL/101] Group: Eldamo. Published by

maksilis

noun. lordship

Early Quenya [QL/057] Group: Eldamo. Published by

na

preposition. for

Early Quenya [PE15/69] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ni

pronoun. this

qi

pronoun. this

Early Quenya [PE14/054; PE14/055] Group: Eldamo. Published by

qinda

adjective. this

Early Quenya [PE14/055; PE16/146] Group: Eldamo. Published by

qinqe

pronoun. this

Early Quenya [PE14/055] Group: Eldamo. Published by

sanda

adjective. that

Early Quenya [PE14/055; PE16/056; PE16/057; PE16/060] Group: Eldamo. Published by

santo

pronoun. that

Early Quenya [PE14/055] Group: Eldamo. Published by

si

pronoun. this

tanya

adjective. that

Early Quenya [MC/215; PE16/090; PE16/092] Group: Eldamo. Published by

táma

adjective. this

Early Quenya [QL/087] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Gnomish

adverb. here

Gnomish [GL/52; GL/68] Group: Eldamo. Published by

adverb. here

sin

adverb. *here

u lâ fin sî

no room for you here

cint

adverb. hither

A word for {“here” >>} “hither” in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s based on G. “here” (GL/26).

sith

adverb. hither

A word for “hither” in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s based on ᴱ√si(n) “this here by me” (GL/68).

sitha

adjective. this

tûm

noun. valley

Gnomish [GL/71; LT1A/Tombo] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Qenya 

sie

pronoun. here

sinome

adverb. here

Qenya [PE23/112; SD/056] Group: Eldamo. Published by

sisse

pronoun. here

Qenya [PE23/108; PE23/111] Group: Eldamo. Published by

símen

adverb. here

sinis(se)

adverb. here

sis

adverb. here

símane

adverb. here

sinome nimaruva, yo hildinyar tenn’ ambar-metta

Here will I abide, and my heirs, unto the ending of the world

adverb. now, here

Qenya [Ety/SI; LR/047; LR/056; LR/072; PE22/105; PE22/120; PE22/124; PE22/125; PE22/126; PE23/092; PE23/099; PE23/109; PE23/110; SD/247; SD/310] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hinis(se)

adverb. *here (by us)

his

adverb. *here (by us)

hisse

adverb. *here (by us)

A correlative combination appearing as hisse or his in Demonstrative, Relative, and Correlative Stems (DRC) from 1948 (PE23/111), a combination of ᴹQ. hi “this by you” and the locative suffix ᴹQ. -sse.

nan úye sére indo-ninya símen, ullume

but my heart resteth not here for ever

sinní

pronoun. I here

sisse alli neri

there are no men here

ten sí ye tyelma, yéva tyel ar i narqelion

for here is ending, and there will be an end and the Fading

si

pronoun. this

Qenya [PE23/097; PE23/098; PE23/111; PE23/112] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ten

conjunction. for

tana

that

Qenya [Ety/TA; PE23/085; PE23/104; PE23/105; PE23/111] Group: Eldamo. Published by

in

pronoun. that

indon

conjunction. as

The correlative ᴹQ. indon “as” appeared in Demonstrative, Relative, and Correlative Stems (DRC) from 1948 (PE23/111), a combination of the relative pronoun ᴹQ. i and the similative suffix ᴹQ. -ndon.

sin

adverb. now

sine

pronoun. this (by me)

Qenya [PE23/102; PE23/103; PE23/107] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tane

pronoun. that

Qenya [PE23/085; PE23/087; PE23/102; PE23/103] Group: Eldamo. Published by

va

preposition. away

Early Primitive Elvish

si(n)

root. this here by me

Early Primitive Elvish [GL/68] Group: Eldamo. Published by

kı̯-ā

adverb. now

Early Primitive Elvish [QL/049] Group: Eldamo. Published by

root. as

Early Primitive Elvish [QL/101] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Middle Primitive Elvish

si

root. this, here, now

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/SI; PE23/096] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tul-

verb. come, am coming, have come, am arrived, am here, are approaching

Middle Primitive Elvish [PE22/095; PE22/096; PE23/076] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ta

root. that

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/TA; PE18/033; PE18/060; PE23/096] Group: Eldamo. Published by