Quenya 

heru

lord, master

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

heru

noun. lord, master

Quenya [DTS/54; Let/282; PE17/097; PE23/139; PM/210; SA/heru; SA/roch; VT41/09; VT43/29; VT44/12] Group: Eldamo. Published by

herucalmo

masculine name. Herucalmo

The husband of the ruling queen Tar-Vanimeldë, the third ruling queen of Númenor; after her death, he briefly (and illegally) kept the throne from his son Tar-Alcarin (UT/222). His name seems to be a combination of heru “lord” and cala “light” with the agental suffix -mo.

Quenya [UTI/Herucalmo] Group: Eldamo. Published by

herumor

masculine name. *Black Lord

An evil Númenórean leader of the Haradrim at the end of the Second Age (S/293). His name seems to be a compound of heru “lord” and morë “black”. The name is translated “Black Númenórean” by Christopher Tolkien (PMI/Herumor) but a more literal translation would be “✱Black Lord”.

Quenya [PMI/Herumor; SA/heru; SI/Herumor] Group: Eldamo. Published by

herunúmen

masculine name. Lord of the West

Tar-Herunúmen was the (somewhat heretical) Quenya name of the 20th ruler of Númenor, more commonly known by his Adûnaic name Ad. Ar-Adûnakhôr (S/267). His name is a compound of heru “lord” and númen “west”.

Conceptual Development: In the unfinished stories “The Lost Road” and “Notion Club Papers” from the 1930s and 40s, Tolkien used the term ᴹQ. Herunúmen to refer to the Valar as Lords of the West (LR/47, SD/310). Its use as a name of Adûnakhôr did not occur until The Lord of the Rings appendices were written (PM/164, note #11).

Quenya [PMI/Herunúmen; S/267; SA/heru; SI/Adûnakhôr; SI/Herunúmen; UTI/Ar-Adûnakhôr; UTI/Herunúmen; UTI/Tar-Herunúmen] Group: Eldamo. Published by

heru órava omessë

Lord, have mercy on us

The first line of Tolkien’s Quenya translation of the Litany of Loreto prayer (VT44/12). The first word is the noun heru “lord” followed by the aorist form of the verb órava- “to have mercy”. The last word omessë “on us” is the locative form (-ssë “on”) of the pronoun me “us”. The significance of the prefix o- is unclear, but Wynne, Smith and Hostetter suggested that it might be the preposition ó (VT44/15), though its translation elsewhere as “with” (VT43/29) does not seem appropriate. It could instead be the prefix o- “together”, though this does not fit well either. In later lines, Tolkien wrote (o)messë indicating the prefix was optional.

Decomposition: Broken into its constituent elements, this phrase would be:

> Heru órava (o)me-ssë = “✱Lord have-mercy us-on”

Conceptual Development: Tolkien explored several ways of expressing “have mercy”. He first wrote a le·ana ocama, apparently meaning “(imperative) you give mercy”, with ocama a noun meaning “mercy” (VT44/12-13). He revised this to simply ocama >> ócama, apparently changing ocama to a verb meaning “to have mercy” (VT44/13). He then changed this verb to órava (VT44/14).

Tolkien also used several forms to express “on us”: dative men >> ómen >> (locative) ómesse.

heru-

to rule

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

heru imillion

proper name. Lord of the Rings

hér

lord

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

heri

lady

heri noun "lady" (KHER, LT1:272)

heri

noun. lady

hér

noun. lord

veru

husband

veru (1) noun "husband" (VT49:45). An earlier source gives the word for "husband" as venno.

veru

noun. husband

The most common word for “husband” in Quenya (VT49/45).

Conceptual Development: This word dates all the way back to the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s where ᴱQ. veru “husband” appeared as a derivative of the early root ᴱ√VEŘE [VEÐE] (QL/101). In the English-Qenya Dictionary of the 1920s the word for “husband” appeared as ᴱQ. vero, but this form was marked as archaic (†) and became in normal speech the longer word ᴱQ. veruner (PE15/74). In Early Noldorin Word-lists and notes on the Valmaric Script from the 1920s the word was still veru (PE13/146; PE14/112), and in the Declension of Nouns from the early 1930s Tolkien gave ᴹQ. veru “husband” as an example of a ū-declension (PE21/15).

In The Etymologies of the 1930s, however, Tolkien gave a different form ᴹQ. venno for “husband” while ᴹQ. veru was a dual form meaning “husband and wife, married pair”, both derived from the root ᴹ√BES “wed” (Ety/BES). The nn in venno is because it was derived from primitive ᴹ✶besnō and sn > zn > nn in Quenya (PE19/49). In a 1969 note, Tolkien restored Q. veru for “husband”, deriving it instead from a root √BER “to mate, be mated, joined in marriage” (VT49/45).

Neo-Quenya: For purposes of Neo-Eldarin, I prefer to retain the 1930s root ᴹ√BES for marriage words in order to preserve Noldorin/Sindarin forms, but I would still use the well-established veru for “husband”, just conceived of as a derivative of the root √BES, coming from ✱besū with intervocalic s > z > r.

númeheru

lord of the west

#númeheru noun "Lord of the West" (númë + heru), attested in these inflected forms: 1) númeheruen "of [the] Lord of the West" (Manwë) (SD:290); this is "Qenya" with genitive in -en instead of -o as in LotR-style Quenya; 2) pl. númeheruvi "Lords-of-West" ("West-lords" = Valar) in SD:246.

heru

heru

PQ kherû "master" from Root KHER.

Quenya [Tolkien Gateway] Published by

Herucalmo

Herucalmo

Herucalmo means "Lord of Light" in Quenya (from heru, 'lord', cala, 'light', and the masculine agentive suffix -mo).

Quenya [Tolkien Gateway] Published by

herumor

Herumor

Herumor means "Black Lord" in Quenya (from heru = "lord" and morë = "dark").

Quenya [Tolkien Gateway] Published by

heru-

verb. to lord it over, be master of, own, [ᴱQ.] rule

herunauco

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

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

herulatsë

noun. estate, domain

A neologism coined by Arael in the “Neologism of the Day” (NotD) series on the Vinyë Lambengolmor Discord Server (VLDS) posted at 2023-06-08, a combination of √KHER “possess, rule” and [ᴺQ.] latsë “area”.

Quenya Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

Malantur

lord, ruler

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

condo

noun. lord

cunta-

verb. to rule

cunya-

verb. to rule

A verb appearing only in a rejected exploration of the etymology of S. Felagund, apparently derived from √KUN along with its cognate cundo. It might have been rejected along with this root. See the discussion of √KUN(DU) for further details. @@@

quimellë

lady

quimellë noun "lady" (GL:45)

túrin

noun. lord

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

vala-

to rule

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

venno

husband

venno noun "husband" (cited as **verno_ in the Etymologies as printed in LR, entry BES, but according to VT45:7, this is a misreading of Tolkien's manuscript)_. In a later source, the word for "husband" is given as veru, q.v.

verno

husband

**verno noun "husband", misreading for venno, q.v. (BES)

Primitive elvish

kherū

noun. lord, master

Primitive elvish [Let/282; PE17/097] Group: Eldamo. Published by

khēr

noun. lord, master

Primitive elvish [Let/282; VT41/09] Group: Eldamo. Published by

verū

noun. husband

Primitive elvish [VT49/45] Group: Eldamo. Published by

kherūnī

noun. lady

Primitive elvish [PE17/097; PE17/098] Group: Eldamo. Published by

kherī

noun. lady

Primitive elvish [PE17/097] Group: Eldamo. Published by

árātō

noun. lord

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

Sindarin 

Herufin

noun. Herufin

prop. n.

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:117] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

heruin

noun. lady

n. lady. >> heryn, Rocheruin

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:97] < _kherū _Lord, Master. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

heruin

noun. lady

heryn

noun. lady

n. lady. >> heruin, Rocheryn

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:97] < _kherū _Lord, Master. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

hiril

noun. lady, lady; [G.] princess, †queen

Sindarin [PE23/143; SA/heru] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hîr

noun. lord, master

Sindarin [AotM/062; LB/354; Let/282; Let/382; PM/210; SA/heru; SD/129; UT/318; VT41/09] Group: Eldamo. Published by

heryn

noun. lady

Sindarin [PE17/097] Group: Eldamo. Published by

heryn

noun. lady

Sindarin [Roheryn S/436] hîr+dî. Group: SINDICT. Published by

rodel

lady

1a _n._lady, high lady. >> Nimrodel

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:49] -. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

bassoneth

lady

(bread-giver) (i massoneth, o mbassoneth), pl. bassonith (i mbassonith). Archaic ✱bassauneth.

benn

husband

(i venn, construct ben), pl. binn (i minn). Later used = "man" in general.

brannon

lord

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

brennil

lady

(i vrennil), pl. same as sg. except with article: i mrennil. Coll. pl. brenillath.

lady

(i nî, o ndi) (bride), no distinct pl. form except with article (i ndî).

heron

lord

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

hervenn

husband

1) hervenn (i chervenn, o chervenn), pl. hervinn (i chervinn); 2) (archaic) benn (i venn, construct ben), pl. binn (i minn). Later used = "man" in general.

hervenn

husband

(i chervenn, o chervenn), pl. hervinn (i chervinn)

heryn

lady

1) heryn (i cheryn, o cheryn), no distinct pl. form, not even with article (i cheryn), 2) hiril (i chiril, o chiril), no distinct pl. form even with article (i chiril), coll. pl. hirillath. 3) brennil (i vrennil), pl. same as sg. except with article: i mrennil. Coll. pl. brenillath. 4) bassoneth (bread-giver) (i massoneth, o mbassoneth), pl. bassonith (i mbassonith). Archaic *bassauneth. 5) (i nî, o ndi) (bride), no distinct pl. form except with article (i ndî).

heryn

lady

(i cheryn, o cheryn), no distinct pl. form, not even with article (i cheryn)

hiril

lady

(i chiril, o chiril), no distinct pl. form even with article (i chiril), coll. pl. hirillath.

hîr

lord

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

hîr

lord

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

tûr

lord

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

Adûnaic

kherû

masculine name. Lord

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

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

adûnakhôr

masculine name. Lord of the West

Son of Ar-Abattârik and the 20th ruler of Númenor, whose Quenya name was Herunúmen. In both languages, his name (somewhat heretically) means “Lord of the West” (LotR/1036, S/267). Its first element adûn means “west”, which implies that its second element means “lord”, but it isn’t clear whether this element is ✱akhôr or ✱khôr. I think that khôr is more likely, because it resembles the Primitive Elvish root √KHER “rule, govern, possess”, to which it may be related.

Adûnaic [LotR/1036; LotR/1114; LotRI/Adûnakhôr; LotRI/Ar-Adûnakhôr; LRI/Ar-Adûnakhôr; PMI/Ar-Adûnakhôr; PMI/Herunúmen; S/267; SA/andúnë; SI/Adûnakhôr; UTI/Ar-Adûnakhôr] Group: Eldamo. Published by

bâr

noun. lord

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

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

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

khôr Reconstructed

noun. lord

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

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

arûn

masculine name. Lord

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

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

Noldorin 

herven

noun. husband

A noun in The Etymologies of the 1930s glossed “husband”, a combination of ᴹ√KHER “govern” and N. benn “man” (which itself archaically meant “husband”), the latter element based on the root ᴹ√BES “wed” (Ety/BES, KHER).

Conceptual Development: In Early Noldorin Word-lists from the 1920s, “husband” was {gwidhion >>} ᴱN. gwedhion, based on the root ᴱ√wed- having to do with marriage (PE13/146). It has a negated form ᴱN. yrwidhion “without husband” (PE13/156). Another precursor was ᴱQ. heruvesto “lord husband” from Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, which was assembled from elements similar to N. hervenn, but in the Qenya branch of the language instead.

Neo-Sindarin: In later writings, Tolkien seems to have revised ᴹ√BES > √BER as the basis for marriage words (VT49/45). However, I prefer to retain the 1930s root ᴹ√BES and would therefore use hervenn for “husband” in Neo-Sindarin, though ᴺS. bethron “spouse (m.)” is an alternative.

Noldorin [Ety/BES; Ety/KHER] Group: Eldamo. Published by

heron

noun. lord, master

Noldorin [EtyAC/KHER] Group: Eldamo. Published by

brannon

noun. lord

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

brannon

noun. lord

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

brennil

noun. lady

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

brennil

noun. lady

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

herven

noun. husband

Noldorin [Ety/352, Ety/364, X/ND4] hîr+benn. Group: SINDICT. Published by

hervenn

noun. husband

Noldorin [Ety/352, Ety/364, X/ND4] hîr+benn. Group: SINDICT. Published by

hervenn

noun. husband

hiril

noun. lady

Noldorin [Ety/364] Group: SINDICT. Published by

hiril

noun. lady

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

Khuzdûl

uzbad

noun. lord

Khuzdûl [PE17/047] Group: Eldamo. 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

heru

noun. lord

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

heruvesto

noun. husband, (lit.) lord husband

A word in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s glossed “husband (lord husband)” (QL/40), a combination of ᴱQ. heru “lord” and a masculine form of ᴱQ. vesta “marriage”.

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

heruven

masculine name. Heorrenda

Quenya name of a son of Eriol in notes from the 1910s, equated to Old Germanic “Heorrenda” (PE15/17), appearing in a longer form Heruvendo. It is probably a phonetic adaptation of the Germanic form.

Early Quenya [PE15/17; PE15/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

heru-

verb. to rule

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

heruni

noun. lady

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

heri

noun. lady

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

veru

noun. husband

Early Quenya [PE13/146; PE14/112; PE15/74; QL/101] Group: Eldamo. Published by

veruner

noun. husband

Early Quenya [PE15/74] Group: Eldamo. Published by

warda-

verb. to rule

Early Quenya [QL/104] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Qenya 

heru

noun. lord, master

Qenya [Ety/KHER; EtyAC/KHER; SD/246; SD/290; SD/311] Group: Eldamo. Published by

herunúmen

proper name. Lord-of-West

Qenya [LR/047; SD/310; SD/311] Group: Eldamo. Published by

heri

noun. lady

veru

noun. husband

númeheruvi arda sakkante lenéme ilúvatáren

the Lords of the West broke the world by leave of Ilúvatar

|1|   2   |3|4|5| |manwe|herunūmen|{herunūmen >>} Nūmekundo|númeheruvi| |ilu|{ilu >> eru >>}|arda| |terhante|{terhante >>} askante|sakkante| | |...|{... >>}|lenéme| | |Ilúvatáren|

Qenya [LR/047; LR/056; SD/246; SD/310; SD/311; VT24/07] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mandu

noun. lord

nissa

noun. lady

nuaran númenen

proper name. Lord of the West

Hypothetical title for the king of Númenor in Tolkien’s unfinished story “The Lost Road”, a combination of Nuaran with the (ᴹQ) genitive of númen “west” (LR/71). It also appeared with the (ᴹQ) genitive of Númenóre.

Qenya [LR/060; LR/071; LRI/Nuaran Númenen] Group: Eldamo. Published by

venno

noun. husband

Qenya [Ety/BES; EtyAC/BES] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Rohirric

herubrand

masculine name. Herubrand

Rohirric [LotRI/Herubrand; WRI/Herubrand] Group: Eldamo. Published by

herugrim

proper name. Herugrim

Rohirric [LotRI/Herugrim; TII/Herugrim; WRI/Herugrim] Group: Eldamo. Published by

herefara

masculine name. Herefara

Rohirric [LotRI/Herefara; WRI/Herefare] Group: Eldamo. Published by

English

Herubrand

Herubrand

Herubrand is Old English for "war-sword".

English [Tolkien Gateway] Published by

Herugar Bolger

Herugar Bolger

The name Herugar means "war-spear".

English [Tolkien Gateway] Published by

Herugrim

Herugrim

Herugrim means "Very fierce or cruel, savage" in Rohirric, as translated through Old English. It has been noted that herugrim is in the Mercian dialect of Old English (the spelling of the "standard" West Saxon dialect would have been heorugrim).

English [Tolkien Gateway] Published by

Gnomish

hermon

noun. lord

herwent

masculine name. Heorrenda

Gnomish name of a son of Eriol in notes from the 1910s, equated to Old Germanic “Heorrenda” (PE15/17), with variant form Horwin. It is probably a phonetic adaptation of the Germanic form.

Gnomish [PE15/17; PE15/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

bedhron

noun. husband

A noun appearing as G. bedhron “husband” in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s replacing archaic G. †benn, a combination of the early root ᴱ√Beđ that was the basis for marriage words and the agental suffix G. -(r)on (GL/22).

Neo-Sindarin: I would adapt this into Neo-Sindarin as ᴺS. bethron “spouse (m.)”, a combination of the later root ᴹ√BES “wed” and the same agental suffix, where sr became thr.

benn

noun. husband

gwiniel

noun. lady

malc

noun. lord

túrin

masculine name. Lord

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

Old Noldorin 

khíril

noun. lady

Old Noldorin [Ety/KHER] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Early Noldorin

gwedhion

noun. husband

Early Noldorin [PE13/146; PE13/156] Group: Eldamo. Published by

hîr

noun. lord

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

Doriathrin

benn

noun. husband

A noun meaning “husband” developed from primitive ᴹ✶besnō (Ety/BES), the only example of how [[ilk|[sn] became [nn]]] in Ilkorin.

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

garon

noun. lord

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

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

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

hiril Reconstructed

noun. lady

A Doriathrin noun for “lady” attested only as an element in the name Hirilorn (Ety/NEL). It probably had essentially the same derivation as its Noldorin cognate N. hiril (Ety/KHER).

Middle Primitive Elvish

besnō

noun. husband

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/BER; Ety/BES] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Edain

hareth

noun. lady