pl2. dernlir n. Dwarf. >> gorn
Khuzdûl
khazad-dûm
place name. Dwarrowdelf, (lit.) Delving of the Dwarves
khazad-dûm
place name. Dwarrowdelf, (lit.) Delving of the Dwarves
nornhabar
place name. Dwarrowdelf
dern
Dwarf
pl2. dernlir n. Dwarf. >> gorn
dornhoth
noun. the Dwarves, lit. "the Thrawn Folk"
gorn
Dwarf
pl2. gornhoth** ** n. Dwarf (hostile implication). >> dern
hadhod
noun. Dwarf
hadhodrim
noun. the Dwarves (as a race)
naug
noun. dwarf
naugrim
noun. Dwarves
nogon
dwarf
nogoth
noun. Dwarf, lit. "the Stunted Folk"
nogotheg
noun. lit. "dwarflet", a name of the Petty-Dwarves
nogothrim
noun. Dwarf-folk
nornwaith
noun. the Dwarves
hadhod
dwarf
1) hadhod (i chadhod, o chadhod), pl. hedhyd (i chedhyd), coll. pl. hadhodrim (WJ:388). This was a word borrowed from Dwarvish Khazâd. 2) naug (in compounds -nog), pl. #noeg, coll. pl. naugrim, nogrim. (WJ:388, 408, 413; VT45:13). In ”Noldorin” the pl. was nuig, but the Sindarin pl. form noeg is attested in Nibin-noeg ”Petty-dwarves” (WJ:187, 420). Note: naug is also used as an adj. ”dwarfed, stunted”. This word for ”dwarf” also appears in a diminutive form: naugol (in compounds naugla-), coll. pl. nauglath. 2)
nogoth
dwarf
nogoth (pl. negyth; coll. pl. nogothrim). Archaic pl. ”noegyth” = nögyth (WJ:388, 408) 3) norn (pl. nyrn, coll. pl. nornwaith). From the adj. norn ”twisted, knotted, crabbed, hard”. (MR:93, WJ:205) 4) #Gonhir (i **Onhir), literally ”Master of Stone”, no distinct pl. form except with article (i Ngonhir = i Ñonhir, maybe primarily used as a coll. pl. Gonhirrim _(WJ:205, there spelt ”Gonnhirrim”) _The coll. pl. Dornhoth** ("Thrawn folk") (WJ:388, 408) also refers to the Dwarves.
Casar
dwarf
Casar ("k")noun "Dwarf", pl. Casari or Casári, partitive plural Casalli. Adapted from Dwarvish Khazâd. Casarrondo place-name "Khazad-dûm", Moria (WJ:388, 389; pl. Casári also in WJ:402)
Nauco
dwarf
Nauco ("k")noun "Dwarf" (capitalized in WJ:388, but not in Etym, stem NAUK). Naucalië (not *Naucolië) the "Dwarf-people" as a whole. Nauco is a personalized form of the adjective nauca "stunted" (itself sometimes used as a noun "dwarf"); pl. naucor (PE17:45). See also Picinaucor.
Naucon
dwarf
Naucon (Naucond-, as in the pl. Naucondi) noun "dwarf", variant of Nauco (PE17:45; not capitalized in the source)
norno
dwarf
Norno (2) noun "dwarf"; a personalized form of the adjective norna(WJ:413); Nornalië (not *Nornolië) the "Dwarf-people" as a whole (WJ:388)
naugl
noun. dwarf
naugol
noun. dwarf
nawag
noun. Dwarf
An earlier Sindarin translation of Khazad-dûm, replaced by Hadhodrond (WJ/209). It is a compound of norn “hard”, which is sometimes used as a name for Dwarves, and the lenited form of ✱sabar “delving”. A variant Dornhabar appears in Tolkien’s Words, Phrases and Passages from the Lord of the Rings (PE17/35), changing the initial element to dorn of similar meaning. The form Domhabar that was originally published in PE17 is confirmed to have been an error; see the PEE (PEE).