_ n. _spark, sparkle (esp. used of the twinkle of stars). >> ithildin
Quenya
tinwë
spark
tinwë
spark
tin
noun. spark
_ n. _spark, sparkle (esp. used of the twinkle of stars). >> ithildin
tinu
noun. spark, small star
tîn
spark
n. spark, star. Q. tinwe spark (Poet. star).
gil-
prefix. spark
tim
small star
(MR:388). Archaic tinw, so the coll. pl. is likely tinwath. 3)
tint
spark
1) tint (i dint, o thint), no distinct pl. form except with article (i thint), coll. pl. tinnath; 2) tinu (i dinu, o thinu; also -din at the end of compounds), analogical pl. tiny (i thiny). The word is also used =
tint
spark
(i dint, o thint), no distinct pl. form except with article (i thint), coll. pl. tinnath
tinu
spark
(i dinu, o thinu; also -din at the end of compounds), analogical pl. tiny (i thiny). The word is also used =
tini
noun. spark
Derivations
- √TIN “sparkle, spark, sparkle, spark, [ᴱ√] twinkle, [ᴹ√] emit slender (silver pale) beams”
Derivatives
- S. tîn “spark, sparkle, twinkle of stars”
Variations
- tĭnĭ ✧ PE21/80
tint
noun. spark
tint
noun. spark
Derivations
- ᴹ√TIN “sparkle, emit slender (silver pale) beams” ✧ Ety/TIN
Element in
- N. Tinfang “Starbeard”
Phonetic Developments
Development Stages Sources ᴹ√TIN > tint [tinte] > [tintʰe] > [tinθe] > [tinθ] > [tint] ✧ Ety/TIN
tinw
noun. spark, small star
gildin
noun. silver spark
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!
tinmē
noun. spark, glint
Derivations
- ᴹ√TIN “sparkle, emit slender (silver pale) beams” ✧ Ety/TIN
Derivatives
sint
noun. spark
Element in
- G. sinta- “to sparkle” ✧ GL/67
Elements
Word Gloss SṆTYṆ “twinkle”
tinwë noun "spark" (gloss misquoted as "sparkle" in the Etymologies as printed in LR, see VT46:19), also "star"; pl. tinwi "sparks", properly used of the star-imagines on Nur-menel (q.v.). Cf. nillë. (TIN, MR:388) In early "Qenya", tinwë was simply glossed "star" (LT1:269, cf. MC:214). In one late source, the meaning of tinwë is given as "spark", and it is said that this word (like Sindarin gil) was used of the stars of heaven "in place of the older and more elevated el, elen- stem" (VT42:11).