1) (fem.) odhril (no distinct pl. form; coll. pl. odhrillath. 2) (male) odhron (pl. edhryn for archaic ödhryn; coll. pl. odhronnath):
Quenya
ontani
parent
ontani
parent
odhril
parent
1) (fem.) odhril (no distinct pl. form; coll. pl. odhrillath. 2) (male) odhron (pl. edhryn for archaic ödhryn; coll. pl. odhronnath):
odhril
parent
(no distinct pl. form; coll. pl. odhrillath.
odhron
parent
(pl. edhryn for archaic ödhryn; coll. pl. odhronnath)
nuphâr
noun. parent
A noun translated “parent” (SD/434). It also appears in the dual form nuphrât “father and mother”, but this dual form is peculiar. As a weak II noun, the dual form ought to be ✱nuphârat, as for example batân “road” → batânat “pair of roads” (SD/431). Its dual form seems instead to undergo the Adûnaic syncope (vowel loss), which happens nowhere else with a long vowel. There is no obvious explanation for this irregular formation.
Variations
- nuphār ✧ SD/434
odhril
noun. parent
odhril
noun. parent (f.)
A feminine variant of N. odhron “parent” from The Etymologies of the 1930s (Ety/ONO), using the feminine agental suffix -ril rather than -ron. See N. odhron for further discussion.
Cognates
- ᴹQ. ontare “begetter, parent (f.)” ✧ Ety/ONO
Derivations
Elements
Word Gloss NŌ/ONO “beget” -(r)il “feminine suffix” Phonetic Developments
Development Stages Sources ᴹ✶onrō > odhril [onril] > [oðril] ✧ Ety/ONO
odhron
noun. parent
odhron
noun. parent
A noun in The Etymologies of the 1930s glossed “parent” derived from the root ᴹ√ONO “beget” (Ety/ONO), where [[s|[nr] became [ðr]]]. It was originally based on primitive ᴹ✶onrō, but suffixal -ro did not survive in Noldorin/Sindarin, and was replaced by other agental suffixes like -ron.
Cognates
- ᴹQ. ontaro “begetter, parent” ✧ Ety/ONO
Derivations
Elements
Word Gloss NŌ/ONO “beget” -(r)on “agental suffix” Phonetic Developments
Development Stages Sources ᴹ✶onrō > odhron [onrondo] > [onrond] > [oðrond] > [oðronn] > [oðron] ✧ Ety/ONO
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!
puyando
noun. parent
A neutral word for “parent” in English-Qenya Dictionary of the 1920s (PE15/76). Its dual form puyandui referred to both “father and mother” (PE15/72). The dual form also appeared in the Early Qenya Grammar, where Tolkien connected it to the verb ᴱQ. puita- “beget” (PE14/77).
ontani form cited in the Etymologies as printed in LR, entry ONO: supposedly the pl. of ontaro, ontarë noun "parent" (m. and. f.) Comparison with the singulars indicate that the n of ontani should actually be r. Thus ontani could be a misreading for ontari (SD:73), but according to VT46:7 the actual manuscript reading is ontaru, evidently a dual form referring to two parents.