Quenya 

naico

sinner

naico (1) noun "sinner"; see naicando

naico

of hill(s)

naico (2) ("k") inflected noun?"of hill(s)" (???) (MC:221; this is "Qenya")

naico

noun. *sinner

Element in

Quenya [VT43/33; VT43/34] Group: Eldamo. Published by

naicando

sinner

#naicando (and #naico, both attested as plural forms in -or) noun "sinner" (VT43:33; Tolkien may have abandoned these forms i favour of #úcarindo)

naicando

noun. *sinner

Element in

ulcarindo

noun. *sinner

Element in

Variations

  • úlcarindor ✧ VTE/44 (úlcarindor)
Quenya [VT43/33; VTE/44] Group: Eldamo. Published by

úcarindo

sinner

#úcarindo (pl. úcarindor, VT43:27) noun "sinner"; cf. úcar-. The form úlcarindor occurring in an older variant of the text in question seems abnormal, since Quenya rarely has a long vowel in front of a consonant cluster (VT43:33)

úcarindo

noun. *sinner

Element in

Elements

WordGloss
úcar-“*to trespass, do wrong, sin”
-ndo“masculine agent”

naico

noun. goat

Cognates

Derivations

Quenya Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

Sindarin 

naeag

noun. goat

A neologism for “goat” coined by Gábor Lőrinczi appearing in VQP (VQP), derived from primitive ✶najak- “goat” (PE21/82).

Cognates

Derivations

  • nayak “goat”
    • NAY “cause bitter grief or pain, cause bitter grief or pain, [ᴹ√] lament”
Sindarin Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

rhugaron

noun. sinner

Elements

WordGloss
rhugar“evil deed, evil deed, *sin”
Sindarin Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

raegdan

noun. sinner

Elements

WordGloss
raeg“wrong, [G.] awry, twisted, distorted, perverse, leering (of face)”
tân“builder, smith, wright, artificer”
Sindarin Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

Primitive elvish

nayak

noun. goat

A primitive word for “goat” appearing in Common Eldarin: Noun Structure of the early 1950s, with masculine and feminine variants ✶najakō “he-goat” and ✶naikē “she-goat” (PE21/82). It might be an elaboration of √NAY “cause bitter grief or pain”, a root that was the basis for various “lament” words. This hypothetical relationship might be a later analog of the connection between early roots ᴱ√NYE(NE) “bleat” (the basis for “goat” words) and ᴱ√NYEHE “weep”; hat tip to Raccoon for suggesting this to me.

Derivations

  • NAY “cause bitter grief or pain, cause bitter grief or pain, [ᴹ√] lament”

Derivatives

Element in

  • naikē “she-goat” ✧ PE21/82
  • nayakō “he-goat” ✧ PE21/82

Variations

  • najak- ✧ PE21/82
Primitive elvish [PE21/82] 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!

Qenya 

yat

noun. goat

The word ᴹQ. yat (yak-) “goat” appeared in the Declension of Nouns from the early 1930s (PE21/24).

Conceptual Development: In the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s and Early Qenya Word-lists of the 1920s, ᴱQ. yakko was “ox” (QL/105; PE16/132). In Common Eldarin: Noun Structure of the early 1950s, Tolkien gave the possibly-related primitive form ✶najak- for “goat”, with masculine and feminine variants ✶najakō “he-goat” and ✶naikē “she-goat” (PE21/82).

Neo-Quenya: Helge Fauskanger used ᴺQ. naico for (male?) “goat” in his NQNT (NQNT) as a derivative of ✶najakō, and I would recommend this over ᴹQ. yat for this purpose. However, I’d recommend ᴺQ. nyéni for a female goat (adapted from ᴱQ. nyéni) since it (a) is more distinctive than ✱naice and (b) does not conflict with ᴹQ. naike “sharp pain”; Helge Fauskanger used nyéni in NQNT as well.

Variations

  • yat ✧ PE21/19
Qenya [PE21/19; PE21/24] Group: Eldamo. Published by