Quenya 

noun. way, method, manner

Derivations

  • LEÑ “*way, method, manner” ✧ PE17/074

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
LEŊ > [lēŋ] > [lēɣ] > [lē]✧ PE17/074

Variations

  • ✧ PE17/074

way

(1) noun "way" = "method, manner" ("as in that is not As way"). Not to be confused with as a stressed form of le = plural "you"; Tolkien was himself dissatisfied with this clash (PE17:74).

men

way

men (2) noun "way" (SA) or "place, spot" (MEN)

men

noun. way, way; [ᴹQ.] place, spot

Cognates

  • S. men “road, way, road, way; [N.] *place”

Derivations

  • MEN “go, move, proceed (in any direction); make for, go towards; have as object, (in)tend; direction, object, point moved toward; region”

Element in

  • ᴺQ. catamen “background, milieu”
  • Q. formen “north, north, [ᴹQ.] right-hand [direction]” ✧ SA/men
  • Q. hyarmen “south, (lit.) left-hand direction” ✧ SA/men
  • Q. Ilmen “*Place of Starlight”
  • ᴺQ. mancamen “market, (lit.) trade-place”
  • ᴺQ. menessë “instead, (lit.) in place”
  • Q. mentië “passage, journey, direction of travel”
  • ᴺQ. mótamen “office”
  • ᴺQ. natsemen “website, (lit.) web-spot”
  • Q. númen “west, direction or region of the sunset, occident, (lit.) going down” ✧ SA/men
  • ᴺQ. parmen “school, place of study”
  • ᴺQ. quermen “a turning, turn, corner (of a street)”
  • Q. rómen “east, uprising, sunrise” ✧ SA/men
  • ᴺQ. tirmen “theater”
  • ᴺQ. tungwemen “tax-office”

vand-

way, path

vand- noun "way, path" (LT1:264; a final vowel would seem to be required, but in Tolkien's later Quenya, the words tië or mallë are to be preferred)

Quenya [Quettaparma Quenyallo] Group: Quettaparma Quenyallo. Published by

Sindarin 

men

noun. way, road

Sindarin [UT/281] Group: SINDICT. Published by

othlonn

noun. paved way

Sindarin [Ety/370, X/ND4] ost+lond. Group: SINDICT. Published by

pâd

noun. way

Sindarin [Aphadon (*ap-pata), Tharbad (*thara-pata) WJ/387] Group: SINDICT. Published by

tharbad

noun. cross-way

Sindarin [S/438] thar-+pâd. Group: SINDICT. Published by

lend

way

(journey), pl. lind, coll. pl. lennath. Note: a homophone means ”tuneful, sweet”

mên

way

1) mên (i vên, construct men, in compounds -ven) (road), pl. mîn (i mîn), 2) lend (journey), pl. lind, coll. pl. lennath. Note: a homophone means ”tuneful, sweet”, 3) #pâd (construct pad), i bâd, pl. paid (i phaid). Isolated from Tharbad ”Crossroad”. 4) (i dê, o thê) (line), pl. (i thî), coll. pl. ?teath.

mên

way

(i vên, construct men, in compounds -ven) (road), pl. mîn (i mîn)

pâd

way

(construct pad), i bâd, pl. paid (i phaid). Isolated from Tharbad ”Crossroad”.

way

(i dê, o thê) (line), pl. (i thî), coll. pl. ?teath.

Primitive elvish

leñ

root. *way, method, manner

A root appearing in notes from the late 1950s to early 1960s (PE17/74) where Tolkien was attempting to explain the origin of the adverbial suffix Q. -lë. He said:

> But adverbial forms were available especially for when far separated from verb or subject. The chief was -le. This is probably from √LEŊ, cf. fortified form in Q lenge, gesture, characteristic look, gesture or trait etc., weak verb lenga, behave.

as noun also is used in sense of “way”, sc. method, manner, as in “that is not A’s way”. Thus oia, everlasting, oiale, everlastingly. Cf. talle, like that, sille, like this, so, yalle, as (in the same way as).

Tolkien then crossed through the first of these paragraphs, saying: “This won’t do, since le is a pronominal element. It should be ve, oiave”. However, he eventually let the word Q. oialë “forever” stand in the Namarië poem, so perhaps he changed his mind again. Despite their rejection, √LEÑ and its derivatives are extremely useful, and I would treat them as valid for purposes of Neo-Eldarin.

Derivatives

  • leñwe
    • Q. lengwë “yearning, desire for what is lost or absent” ✧ PE19/097
  • Q. -lë “abstract noun, adverb” ✧ PE17/074
  • Q. “way, method, manner” ✧ PE17/074
  • ᴺQ. lenga- “to behave”
  • Q. lenga- “to behave” ✧ PE17/074
  • ᴺQ. lengë “gesture, characteristic look, gesture or trait”
  • Q. lengë “gesture, characteristic look, gesture or trait” ✧ PE17/074

Variations

  • LEŊ ✧ PE17/074 (LEŊ); PE17/159
Primitive elvish [PE17/074; PE17/159] Group: Eldamo. Published by

len

root. *way, [ᴹ√] way, (?road)

A variant of √LED in notes from the late 1950s or early 1960s that Tolkien considered to explain the derivation of S. lembas “waybread” (PE17/60). The root ᴹ√LEN “(?road), way” also appeared earlier in The Etymologies of the 1930s as the basis for N. lembas (EtyAC/LEN). Tolkien may have settled on this root when he revised the earlier root ᴹ√LED (Ety/LED) “go, fare, travel” >> √DEL “walk, go, proceed, travel” in the 1959-60 Quendi and Eldar essay (WJ/360), deciding that its inversion √LED was used mainly in Quenya (WJ/363).

A possible precursor to this root is ᴹ√ “go, fare” in the Declension of Nouns (DN) from the early 1930s with derivative ᴹQ. lesto “journey” (PE21/12). This is turn is probably a later iteration of ᴱ√LEHE “come, be sent, approach” from the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, given as a variant of ᴱ√ELE (QL/52). It is probably the basis for contemporaneous G. len “come, arrived” and G. lentha- “come towards speaker, approach, draw near” (GL/53) and possibly ᴱQ. lehe- or ᴱQ. lehta- “ride” from the English-Qenya Dictionary of the 1920s (PE15/76).

For a discussion of other parallel roots, see √LED and √DEL.

Derivatives

  • Q. lenda “journey, journey, *travel, trip” ✧ PE17/060

Element in

Primitive elvish [PE17/060; PE17/159] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Noldorin 

othlon

noun. paved way

Noldorin [Ety/370, X/ND4] ost+lond. Group: SINDICT. Published by

othlond

noun. paved way

Noldorin [Ety/370, X/ND4] ost+lond. Group: SINDICT. Published by

rada-

verb. to make a way, find a way

Noldorin [Ety/383] 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!

Early Noldorin

bad

noun. way

Early Noldorin [PE13/120; PE13/137; PE13/160] Group: Eldamo. Published by