Noldorin 

peng

noun. bow (for shooting)

Noldorin [Ety/KWIG] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Telerin 

noun. bow

Sindarin 

noun. bow, bow; [N.] arch, crescent; [G.] waxing or waning moon

Sindarin [PE17/122; S/209; SA/cú] Group: Eldamo. Published by

bow

(i gû, o chû) (arch, crescent), pl. cui (i chui)

eilian

rainbow

(pl. eiliain). Archaic elianw (so the coll. pl. may be eilianwath).

peng

bow

(i beng, o pheng), pl. ping (i phing)

Quenya 

luhta-

to bow

luhta- (2) vb. "to bow" (VT47:35); this intransitive verb can be distinguished from luhta- "enchant" above, since #1 is transitive and will always have a direct object, something #2 never has.


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 Quenya

qinga

noun. bow

Early Quenya [LT1A/Ilweran; PME/077; QL/077] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Qenya 

qinga

noun. bow (for shooting)

qingatelko

adjective. *bow-legged

A word appearing in Lord of the Rings drafts as part of Treebeard’s description of orcs (SD/68), the equivalent of English “bow-legged” from the finished text (LotR/979) and a combination of [ᴹQ.] qinga “bow” and telko “leg”.

noun. bow, bow; [ᴱQ.] crescent moon

Gnomish

quing

noun. bow

branc

noun. bow (for shooting)

brant

noun. bow (for shooting)

Gnomish [GL/24; GL/50; GL/65; LT1A/Ilweran] Group: Eldamo. Published by

branta

noun. bow (for shooting)

cwing

noun. bow

Gnomish [GL/28; LT2A/Teld Quing Ilon; PE13/104] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Middle Primitive Elvish

kwingā

noun. bow (for shooting)

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/KWIG] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ku(ʒ)

root. bow

The root ᴹ√KU(Ʒ) “bow” appeared in The Etymologies of the 1930s (Ety/KUƷ), most likely a later version of ᴱ√KUVU “bend, bow” from the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s (QL/49). One notable derivative in both periods was G. “bow, crescent” and N. “arch, crescent”, which regularly appeared as S. “bow” in later writings, for example in S. Laer Cú Beleg “Song of the Great Bow” (GL/27; Ety/KUƷ; S/209).

The probably-related root ᴹ√KUB “bow” appeared in the Quenya Verbal System of the 1940s (PE22/102); ᴹQ. nukumna “humbled (?under-bowed)” from this period may also be related (SD/246). In notes from the late 1950s or early 1960s Tolkien gave ✶kūma, Q. cúma and S. cû(f) next to Q. lúva “bow, bight (not for shooting)” < √LUB “bend”, so presumably cúma/cû was “bow (for shooting)” (PE17/122). Finally Q. cúna “bent, curved” appeared in notes associated with the version of the Q. Markirya poem from the late 1960s, along with a verb form cúna- “to bend” (MC/222-223).

These variations make it difficult to determine what Tolkien intended the root to mean, but for purposes of Neo-Eldarin I would assume a base root of √KU(Ʒ) or √KU(H) with perhaps a verbal variant √KUB based on its use in the 1940s, and with the primitive sense “bow, bend”.

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/KUƷ; Ety/KWIG; EtyAC/KWIG; PE22/102] Group: Eldamo. Published by

kub

root. bow

Middle Primitive Elvish Group: Eldamo. Published by

kuu̯

noun. bow

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/KUƷ; EtyAC/KUƷ] Group: Eldamo. Published by