nassë (2) noun "thorn, spike" (NAS). Not to be confused with nassë "(s)he is", VT49:30 or nassë # above. Note that in late material, the unambiguous word necel appears for "thorn" (PE17:55).
Quenya
tinda
spike
nassë
thorn, spike
tildë
spike, horn
tildë noun "spike, horn" _(TIL; in the Etymologies as printed in LR, the first gloss is quoted as "point", but according to VT46:19, the proper reading is "spike")_
carca
tooth
carca noun "tooth" (KARAK) or "fang" (SA:carak-). In a deleted version of the entry in question, the glosses were "tooth, spike, peak" (VT45:19). When referring to a normal tooth, not necessarily sharp, the word nelet is probably to be preferred. Cf. also pl. carcar _("karkar") _in Markirya, there translated "rocks", evidently referring to sharp rocks. Already the early "Qenya Lexicon" has carca ("k")"fang, tooth, tusk" (LT2:344). Collective carcanë, q.v.
nassëa
adjective. spiked, pointed, barbed
cendë
point
cendë noun "point" (PE16:96)
cendë
noun. point
ehtë
spear
ehtë (stem *ehti-, given the primitive form ekti) noun "spear" (EK/EKTE). Another word for "spear" is hatal.
hatal
spear
hatal noun "spear" (VT49:14, 33). Another word for "spear" is ehtë.
hatal
noun. spear, spear, *javelin
inga
top, highest point
inga (1) noun "top, highest point" (PM:340), "only applied to shapes pointing upwards...[it] referred primarily to position and could be used of tops relatively broad". Compounded in the nouns aldinga "tree-top" (alda + inga) (VT47:28), ingaran "high-king" (PM:340)
mentë
point, end
mentë noun "point, end" (MET)
necel
thorn
necel ("k") noun "thorn" (PE17:55)
necel
noun. thorn
A word for “thorn” in notes on the Words, Phrases and Passages from the Lord of the Rings from the late 1950s or early 1960s, derived from the root √NEK having to do with angles (PE17/55).
nelcë
tooth
nelcë ("k")noun "tooth", also nelet (VT46:3)
nelet
tooth
nelet, also nelcë ("k")noun "tooth", pl. nelci ("k") suggesting a stem-form nelc- (NÉL-EK)
tilma
noun. point
ingëa
adjective. top
@@@ Discord 2022-05-23
tinda (2) noun "spike" (LT1:258; probably obsoleted by # 1 above)