carch (i garch, o charch) (tooth), pl. cerch (i cherch)
Sindarin
carch
noun. fang, fang, [N.] tooth
carch
fang
carch
fang
(i garch, o charch) (tooth), pl. cerch (i cherch)
carch
noun. fang, fang, [N.] tooth
carch
fang
carch (i garch, o charch) (tooth), pl. cerch (i cherch)
carch
fang
(i garch, o charch) (tooth), pl. cerch (i cherch)
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!
karkanel
noun. fang
The Sindarin word for “fang” (SA/carak), most notably appearing as an element in the names like S. Carchost “Fang Fort” (RC/601) and S. Carcharoth “Red Maw” (S/180), perhaps more literally “✱Great Red Fang”. In The Etymologies of the 1930s, N. carch was glossed “tooth, fang” under the root ᴹ√KARAK “sharp fang, spike, tooth” (Ety/KARAK). For purposes of Neo-Sindarin, I’d use the word carch exclusively for the sharp teeth of animals (“fang”) and for “tooth” I’d use [N.] nêl or neleg.
Conceptual Development: The Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s had the word G. carc “jag, point, fang” (GL/25), likely based on the earlier form of the root: ᴱ√KṚKṚ (QL/48). This early word reflects the different phonetic developments of Gnomish versus Sindarin/Noldorin: compare G. orc (GL/63) vs. S./N. orch.