Quenya 

osto

noun. city

Quenya [PE 22:124] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

osto

the gates of the sun

osto (2) noun "the gates of the Sun" (LT1:264; this "Qenya" word was probably obsoleted by # 1 above)

osto

strong or fortified building or place, strong place, fortress

osto (1) noun "a strong or fortified building or place, strong place, fortress" (MR:350, 471; WJ:414); "city, town with wall round" (OS, VT46:8)

osto

noun. fortress, stronghold, strong place, fortress, stronghold, strong place; [ᴹQ.] city, town with wall round

The best known Quenya word for “city”, but strictly speaking really a fortification or a stronghold (Ety/OS; MR/350; NM/228; PE22/124; WJ/414). The two were more or less synonymous, since in Middle-earth most cities were fortified. In theory osto might also be used of any large fortification, not just a fortified city, as was the case with its Sindarin cognate ost, but in most of the Quenya examples it was used in city-names.

Conceptual Development: Possible precursors include the words ᴱQ. os (ost-) {“dwelling, hamlet” >>} “cottage, house”, ᴱQ. osta {“walled tower” >>} “homestead”, and ᴱQ. ostar {“walled tower” >>} “township” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s under the early root ᴱ√OSO [’OSO] (QL/71). The contemporaneous Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa (PME) had only the older glosses, but the forms began with h: ᴱQ. hos(t) “dwelling, hamlet”, ᴱQ. hosta/hostar “walled tower” (PME/71). Elsewhere in PME Tolkien said that osta was equivalent to ᴱQ. irin “town” (PME/43).

The Etymologies of the 1930s had ᴹQ. osto “city, town with wall round” under the root ᴹ√OS “round, about” (Ety/OS). Notes on The Feanorian Alphabet from the 1940s had osto “fort” (PE22/50 note #183), but in the Quenya Verbal System of the late 1940s Tolkien glossed this word as “city” in the phrase: tasse i·osto “there (is) the city” (PE22/124).

In Tolkien’s later writing this word was glossed “fortification” (NM/228), “a strong or fortified building or place” (MR/350), and “fortress or stronghold” (WJ/414). With some exceptions like the name Mandos, it appeared mainly as an element in the names of cities of Men, Elves or Dwarves, such as Armenelos, Formenos, and Túrosto. Note the reduction of the suffix to -os in longer compounds, but not in shorter compounds like Túrosto.

Cognates

  • S. ost “fort, fortress, stronghold, citadel; fortified town; enclosure, fort, fortress, stronghold, citadel; (fortified) town, [N.] city; [orig.] [S.] enclosure, [G.] yard” ✧ SA/os(t); NM/228; WJ/414

Derivations

  • ostō “fortress or stronghold” ✧ VT39/06; WJ/414

Element in

  • ᴺQ. amilosto “metropolis”
  • Q. Armenelos “City of the Kings; *(lit.) Noble Heaven City”
  • Q. Tar Calimos “*Royal Bright City”
  • ᴺQ. arosto “suburb(s), suburbia, outskirts (of city, town)”
  • Q. Formenos “Northern Fortress” ✧ SA/os(t)
  • ᴺQ. hérosto “capital city”
  • Q. Mandos “Castle of Custody” ✧ MR/350; SA/os(t)
  • Q. Ondosto “*Stone City”
  • ᴺQ. ostar “community”
  • Q. Ostoher “*City Lord”
  • ᴺQ. ostomo “citizen”
  • Q. Túrosto “Mickleburg, (lit.) Great Fortress”

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ostō > osto[ostō] > [osto]✧ VT39/06
ostō > osto[ostō] > [osto]✧ WJ/414
Quenya [MR/350; MR/471; NM/228; SA/os(t); VT39/06; WJ/414] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Túrosto

gabilgathol

Túrosto place-name "Gabilgathol", a dwelling of the Dwarves (Sindarin Belegost; the names mean "Mickleburg", "Great Fortress"). Apparently túra + osto.

Sindarin 

ost

noun. city, town with wall round

Sindarin [Ety/379, S/435, WJ/414, RC/232] Group: SINDICT. Published by

ost

noun. citadel, fortress or stronghold, made or strenghtened by art

Sindarin [Ety/379, S/435, WJ/414, RC/232] Group: SINDICT. Published by

othrond

noun. fortress or city in underground caves, underground stronghold

Sindarin [Ety/379, Ety/384, WJ/414, X/ND4] ost+rond. Group: SINDICT. Published by

othronn

noun. fortress or city in underground caves, underground stronghold

Sindarin [Ety/379, Ety/384, WJ/414, X/ND4] ost+rond. Group: SINDICT. Published by

ost

city

ost (pl. yst) (city/town with wall around).

ost

city

(pl. yst) (city/town with wall around).

othronn

underground city or stronghold

(pl. ethrynn for archaic öthrynn) (fortress in a cave or caves). Cited in archaic form othrond in the sources (WJ:414, VT46:12)

Adûnaic

kadar

noun. city

A noun appearing only as an element in kadar-lâi “city folk” (SD/435).

Element in

Khuzdûl

gathol Reconstructed

noun. fortress

Element in

Primitive elvish

ostō

noun. fortress or stronghold

Derivatives

  • Q. osto “fortress, stronghold, strong place, fortress, stronghold, strong place; [ᴹQ.] city, town with wall round” ✧ VT39/06; WJ/414
  • S. ost “fort, fortress, stronghold, citadel; fortified town; enclosure, fort, fortress, stronghold, citadel; (fortified) town, [N.] city; [orig.] [S.] enclosure, [G.] yard” ✧ WJ/414
Primitive elvish [VT39/06; WJ/414] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Noldorin 

ost

noun. city, town with wall round

Noldorin [Ety/379, S/435, WJ/414, RC/232] Group: SINDICT. Published by

ost

noun. citadel, fortress or stronghold, made or strenghtened by art

Noldorin [Ety/379, S/435, WJ/414, RC/232] Group: SINDICT. Published by

othrond

noun. fortress or city in underground caves, underground stronghold

Noldorin [Ety/379, Ety/384, WJ/414, X/ND4] ost+rond. 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!

Qenya 

osto

noun. city, town with wall round, fort

Cognates

  • N. ost “city, town (with wall round)” ✧ Ety/OS

Derivations

  • ᴹ√OS “round, about” ✧ Ety/OS

Element in

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴹ√OS > osto[osto]✧ Ety/OS
Qenya [Ety/OS; EtyAC/OS; PE22/050; PE22/124] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Early Noldorin

ost

noun. city

Element in

  • En. uvost “without a town” ✧ PE13/155 (uvost)
Early Noldorin [PE13/152; PE13/155] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Early Quenya

osto

noun. gates of the Sun

A word for “the gates of the Sun” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s derived from the root ᴱ√OŘO [OÐO], also the basis for ᴱQ. ōre “dawn”; Tolkien considered transferring it to the root ᴱ√OSO, the basis for wall and town words (QL/70-71).

Derivations

  • ᴱ√OÐO “*dawn” ✧ LT1A/Oromë; QL/070

Element in

  • Eq. Ostor “the East, the Sun when she issues from her white gates” ✧ LT1A/Oromë; QL/071

Phonetic Developments

DevelopmentStagesSources
ᴱ√OŘO > osto[oðtō] > [oðto] > [ozto] > [osto]✧ QL/070
Early Quenya [LT1A/Oromë; QL/071] Group: Eldamo. Published by