quendë noun "Elf", the little-used analogical sg. of Quendi, q.v. (KWEN(ED), WJ:361)
Quenya
Quende#
noun. Elf
quendë
elf
Quende#
noun. Elf
quendë
elf
quendë noun "Elf", the little-used analogical sg. of Quendi, q.v. (KWEN(ED), WJ:361)
tawarwaith
noun. Silvan elves
tawarwaith
noun. forest people
tawar (“great wood, forest”) + gwaith (“people, folk”)
tawarwaith
place name. Forest People
A term for the Silvan Elves (UT/256), a combination of tawar “forest” and the lenited form of gwaith “people”.
Elements
Word Gloss tawar “forest, forest; [N.] wood (material)” gwaith “people; region, people, [ᴱN.] men, folk; [N.] manhood; man-power, troop of able bodied men, host, regiment; [S.] region”
eglath
noun. "The Forsaken", Elves of the Falathrim
iathrim
noun. Elves of Doriath
laegrim
noun. the people of the Green Elves
telerrim
noun. the Teleri, a tribe of Elves
galadhrim
noun. Elves of Lothlórien
laegeldrim
noun. the people of the Green Elves
Teler
noun. an Elf, one of the Teleri
elleth
noun. elf-maid
lachend
noun. Deep Elf (Sindarin name for the Ñoldor)
lachenn
noun. Deep Elf (Sindarin name for the Ñoldor)
mornedhel
noun. Dark-Elf
edhelharn
noun. elf-stone
egladhrim
noun. "The Forsaken", Elves of the Falathrim
elvellon
noun. elf-friend
laegel
noun. a Green Elf
calben
noun. all Elves but the Avari
miniel
noun. an Elf, one of the Vanyar
edhel
noun. Elf
edhel
noun. Elf
_ n. _Elf, a general name for all the Elves (since the name Quendi had gone out of use in Sindarin). Probably related to or connected with Q. Elda. >> edhellen
edhel
Elf
pl1. edhil, pl2. edhellim {ð} _n. _Elf. A name used by the Sindar for themselves, characterizing other varieties by an adjective or prefix. >> Aredhel, Thinnedhel
edhel
Elf
{ð} _n. _Elf.
edhel
Elf
d _ n. _Elf. Q. elda.
gódhellim
noun. "Deep Elves" or "Gnomes", the Wise Folk
ódhellim
noun. Deep Elves or Gnomes, the Wise Folk
calben
noun. Elf of the Great Journey (lit. "light person")
glinnel
noun. Elf, one of the Teleri
golodh
noun. "Deep Elf" or "Gnome", one of the Wise Folk
ódhel
noun. Deep Elf or Gnome, one of the Wise Folk
gódhel
noun. "Deep Elf" or "Gnome", one of the Wise Folk
dúnedhel
noun. Elf of the West, Elf of Beleriand (including Noldor and Sindar)
golodhrim
noun. Deep Elves, Gnomes
ell
noun. elf
n. elf, esp. [?in ?the ?South]. Noldorin form.
ellon
noun. elf
tawarwaith
forest-people
(Silvan Elves) Tawarwaith (UT.256)
tawarwaith
forest-people
(Silvan Elves) Tawarwaith (UT.256);
tawarwaith
forest-people
(UT.256)
tawarwaith
silvan elves
Tawarwaith (lit. ”Forest-people”)
tawarwaith
silvan elves
(lit. ”Forest-people”)
edhel
elf
edhel (pl. edhil). Coll. pl. Edhelrim (or Edhellim) (UT:318). Also †eledh, pl. elidh, coll. pl. eledhrim (Letters:281), also elen, pl. elin, also with coll. pl. eledhrim (elen + rim with the regular change nr > dhr). _(WJ:363, 377-78; _the shorter coll. pl. Eldrim > Elrim_ _may also occur). But since elin also means "stars", other terms for "Elf" may be preferred.
galadrim
noun. Elves of Lothlórien
Danas
noun. Green-elves, Nandor
In Etym derived from the stem DAN (LR:353), simply defined as an "element found in names of the Green-elves", and tentatively compared to NDAN "back" (since the Nandor "turned back" and did not complete the march to the Sea). Tolkien's later view on the derivation of the name of the Green-elves, as set down in WJ:412, is that the stem dan- and its strengthened form ndan- do indeed have a similar meaning: these forms have to do with "the reversal of an action, so as to undo or nullify its effect", and a primitive form ndandô, "one who goes back on his word or decision", is suggested. However, it seems unlikely that the Nandor would have called themselves by such a name, and indeed Tolkien in WJ:385 states that "this people still called themselves by the old clan-name Lindai [= Quenya Lindar], which had at that time taken the form Lindi in their tongue". It may be, then, that Tolkien had rejected the idea that the Nandor called themselves Danas. - As for the ending -as, it is probably to be compared to the Sindarin class plural ending -ath; indeed a Sindarin ("Noldorin") form Danath evidently closely corresponding to Danas is given in LR:353.
cwenda
noun. elf
A doubtful word according to Tolkien's later conception; in the branch of Eldarin that Nandorin belongs to, primitive KW became P far back in Elvish linguistic history [WJ:375 cf. 407 note 5]. This was not a problem in Tolkien's earlier conception, in which the Danians came from the host of the Noldor, not the Teleri [see PM:76; the idea of the Nandor being of Noldorin origin also occurs in VT47:29]. In his later version of Nandorin, the word cwenda is probably best ignored; simply emending it to *penda would produce a clash with primitive pendâ "sloping" [cf. WJ:375].
In the Etymologies, Tolkien derived cwenda from kwenedê "elf" (stem KWEN(ED) of similar meaning, LR:366; as for the shift of original final -ê to Nandorin -â, compare hrassa "precipice" from khrassê). But later the primitive word that yielded Quenya Quende was reconstructed as kwende (WJ:360).
No certain example shows how original short final -e comes out in Nandorin, so we cannot say whether kwende is also capable of yielding cwenda, ignoring the question of kw failing to become p.
edhel
noun. Elf
golodh
noun. "Deep Elf" or "Gnome", one of the Wise Folk
golodhrim
noun. Deep Elves, Gnomes
Elf