Middle Primitive Elvish
rim
root. abound; large number
kuilez
noun. quiet
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!
rim
root. abound; large number
kuilez
noun. quiet
A likely precursor to this root appeared in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s as ᴱ√‘(A)ṚM(A)R and ᴱ√‘ṚMṚ with a Gnomish form ᴱ√grimri· (QL/32), indicating the actual primitive form was ✱ᴱ√ƷṚMṚ. Derivatives of this early root include ᴱQ. arm- “gather, collect” and G. grim “host, folk”, the last of these the likely precursor to N. rhim.
The root ᴹ√RIM appeared in Primitive Quendian Structure: Final Consonants from 1936, glossed “host, large number” >> “number, plenty” (PE21/57). It also appeared in The Etymologies written around 1937, with gloss “abound” and derivatives such as ᴹQ. rimbe/N. rhim “crowd, host” (Ety/RIM). The roots ᴹ√SRĪ, SRĬMĬ, and SRIMBI “abound” appeared in Demonstrative, Relative, and Correlative Stems (DRC) from the late 1940s, quickly revised to ᴹ√RĪ, RĬMĬ, and RIMBI (PE23/100 note #34). Quenya and Sindarin forms Q. rimbë and S. rim continued to appear in Tolkien’s later writing (Let/382; PE17/50; UT/318), so it is likely the root √RIM remained valid, especially given the prevalence of suffix -rim in Sindarin collective names.