By making a language, the Firstborn of Ilúvatar identified
themselves as Incarnates, children of the One: "The making of a lambe
[language] is the chief character of an Incarnate," Pengolodh the sage of
Gondolin observed (WJ:397). Indeed "the newly-waked devised many new and
beautiful words, and many cunning artifices of speech" (WJ:422). The language
made by the first Elves at Cuiviénen was to have an immense impact on
the linguistic history of Middle-earth. Usually called Primitive
Quendian, it was the ultimate ancestor of all Elvish languages, including
Quenya and Sindarin. Even languages not directly descended from PQ had borrowed
words from Elvish, as documented in the articles about Adûnaic, Mannish,
Dwarvish and even Orkish and the Black Speech. WR:159 and PM:63 quote Faramir
as saying that "all speech of men in this world is Elvish in descent". The sole
language of Arda that may have been wholly free from Elvish influence may be
Valarin. In practice, Valarin would also be the only language older than
Primitive Quendian. True, Aulë had invented Khuzdul
for the Dwarves long before the coming of the Elves, but since Ilúvatar
did not want the Dwarves to come before his own Firstborn, the Dwarves were still
sleeping when the Quendi awoke.
What was it like, the tongue that the Elves formed in those first
years of innocence by the starlit waters of Cuiviénen? We know much of
its phonology and methods of derivation; we know less of its precise
grammatical structure. Judging from the daughter-languages that are commonly
held to be least changed from the original, namely Quenya and Telerin, PQ was a
case language; an allative ending -da is explicitly mentioned by Tolkien
(WJ:366). Concerning the general style of the primitive language, the vast
majority of words had two or three syllables and ended in a vowel. In VT39:6,
Tolkien states that in Quenya, "all final consonants had probably lost a vowel,
if remote Quendian origins were considered". (Some of Tolkien's "reconstructed"
forms nevertheless end in a consonant, but they are not many, and not all the
asterisked forms necessarily describe the oldest stage of the language.)
Very characteristic of primitive Elvish are the frequent long final vowels,
e.g. in lindâ "sweet-sounding" or ndorê "land". In
three-syllable words, the first and the second vowel are usually identical
(e.g. karani "red"), and in a number of cases the final vowel is also
the same, but long (e.g. eredê "seed", galadâ "tree",
kyelepê "silver", ñgolodô "Noldo"). According to
VT39:6, vowels in hiatus probably did not occur medially in the primitive language;
where they occur in Quenya an intervening consonant has been lost. Tolkien's
reconstructed forms nonetheless include at least one hiatic combination, ie,
iê; in light of his later concept we may assume that this represents
even earlier *ihe or *iñe with a middle consonant that was later lost.
In the Silmarillion Index, Christopher Tolkien refers to Quenya as "the ancient
tongue, common to all Elves, in the form that it took in Valinor". However, the
style of "the ancient tongue" in many respects differed markedly from later
Quenya, and generally the word Quenya should not be applied to it at all. True,
the sound-changes that separate Primitive Quendian from classical High-Elven
are so tidy and straightforward that a speaker of Quenya might, with a little
training, have been able to understand the primitive language without actually
"learning" it as a foreign tongue. But even so, the primitive language would
sound pretty outlandish to him, and he would hardly recognize it as a mere
variant of his own tongue. Still, the fact remains that the Noldor held that
Quenya was the language "most nearly preserving the ancient character of Elvish
speech" (WJ:374). Actually the most conservative language seems to be the
Telerin of Aman, as least as far as phonology is concerned - but then Telerin
was sometimes thought of as a dialect of Quenya, though the Teleri themselves
held it to be a separate language.
Tolkien distinguished two stages of primitive Elvish. The very first stage,
as noted above, was Primitive Quendian. This was the ancestor of all
Elvish tongues in the world (except, possibly, any products of wholesale a
priori language construction, if the Elves engaged in such sports...as we
know, some humans do! However, it is said in the Silmarillion, chapter 17, that "all
the languages of the Quendi were of one origin"). In the Etymologies, only a few of
the asterisked forms are explicitly identified as Primitive Quendian (atar,
atû, dêr/der-, khalatirnô,
mâ3/ma3-, and taurâ; see the entries
ATA, NI1, NÊR, TIR, MA3,
TÂ/TA3). Nonetheless, most of the asterisked forms must be assumed
to represent the most primitive stage of the language. The next stage was
Common Eldarin, the ancestor of all the Eldarin (as opposed to Avarin)
tongues, including Quenya and Sindarin. Common Eldarin would be the language
spoken by the Elves that followed Oromë and embarked on the March from
Cuiviénen to the Sea, or rather the language they developed during the
March. In the Etymologies, only three words are explicitly identified as
(Common) Eldarin (mahtâ-, ndæ^r, wa,
see MA3, NDER, WÔ...unfortunately the computer can't
place a circumflex above æ). However, a number of Common Eldarin
forms are given in WJ and PM.
It might be helpful to know approximately how much time the periods
involved represent. In WJ:5-6, a chronology in Valian years is set out. In
WJ:20 we are told that 365 "long years of the Valar" equal "well nigh...three
thousand and five hundred years of the Sun", sc. one Valian year is about nine
and a half solar year. Using this figure, we get the following result: After
the Elves awoke by the mere of Cuiviénen, they dwelt in peace for about
280 solar years (Valian Years 1050 to ca. 1080). Then they were found by the
spies of Melkor and afflicted by them. About fifty more solar years passed,
after which the Elves were found by Oromë in the Valian year 1085. The
Separation of the Quendi into Eldar and Avari eventually followed, apparently
in the year 1105, about 190 solar years later. (The impression one might get
from the Silmarillion text, that the Separation occurred within weeks or
months after Oromë's finding the Elves, turns out to be wholly wrong.) So
from the Elves awoke until the Separation, well over five hundred solar years
elapsed, ample time for developing a complete language - but still not very
long by Elvish standards. (Cf. Legolas' words in LotR2/III ch. 6: "Five hundred
times have the red leaves fallen in Mirkwood in my home since [the Meduseld was
built], and but a little while does that seem to us." Half a millennium was not
perceived as a very long time by the Elves.)
The March from Cuiviénen to the Sea lasted well over two and a half
century of solar years (Valian Years 1105-1132). During this time, the Marchers
turned Primitive Quendian into Common Eldarin. Then the Vanyar and Noldor went
over the sea, and about this point Common Eldarin evidently became Old Quenya,
as the pre-record period in the evolution of Elvish was nearing its end. In
Beleriand, Common Eldarin (or the Common Telerin dialect of it) started to
evolve towards Sindarin.
Millennia later, it was also in Beleriand that the exiled Noldor started
to study comparative linguistics and reconstruct the primitive language:
"It was...the contact with Sindarin and the enlargement of their
experience with linguistic change (especially the much swifter and more
uncontrolled shifts observable in Middle-earth) that stimulated the
studies of the linguistic loremasters, and it was in Beleriand that
theories concerning Primitive Eldarin and the interrelation of its known
descendants were developed." - PM:342.
(The ultimate experiment in Tolkienian linguistics: Teach Primitive Quendian to a
few thousand people and place them on a remote continent all by themselves.
Then come back a millennium or two later and check if their descendants
have developed languages similar to Quenya and/or Sindarin.)
Finally, Tolkien listed "Oral sonants, or weak voiced spirants". These are the semi-vowel w
of the p-series, the lateral/vibrant sounds l and r of the t-series,
and the semi-vowel j (= English "y" as in you) of the
Tolkien added: "Outside the tripartite system [sc. the p-, t, and k-series]
was the one voiceless spirantal sound s. To some extent it belonged to the t-series."
He also remarked that this s had a voiced "variety" z, but this was an allophone
of s rather than an independent phoneme. The actual primitive forms cited suggest that
z occurs primarily where s comes into contact with a following d, as in
the "root" MIZD (LR:373, compare the apparently related root MISK listed on the
same page). EZDÊ must be taken as a Common Eldarin form, in light of what
Tolkien says in WJ:403.
We notice that ignoring the sibilant s, the primitive language had no other spirant than
3, and even this sound Tolkien often reconstructs as h instead (in LR:360, the original stem yielding Quenya ho "from"
is given as 3Ô, while in WJ:368 the corresponding stem is given as HO). Since we are dealing with a reconstructed form of
Elvish, the exact quality of this sound is of little importance.
Stem vowel prefixed: In the entry I in the Etymologies,
Tolkien explains that i is an "intensive prefix where i is base
vowel". He mentions ITHIL "Moon" as an example; this is derived from a stem (or
"base") THIL "shine silver" (see SIL). INDIS "bride" as a name of
the goddess Nessa comes from NDIS "woman"; the vowel-prefixed variant
i-ndise is called an "intensive form". Cf. also WJ:318, where Quenya and
Sindarin estel "hope" is said to be a stemvowel-prefixed derivative of a
stem STEL "remain firm".
A-infixion: In some cases, a new vowel A is inserted into a
stem, turning the stem-vowels i, u into diphthongs ai,
au. The stem SLIW "sickly" yields the adjective
slaiwâ "sickly, sick, ill" (contrast another derivative,
slîwê "sickness", that does not show infixion).
A-infixion is also seen in the word taun ?"hill" from
TUN (see MINI). From the stem MIL-IK *"greed" is derived
Mailikô, a name of Melkor. Yet other examples from the
Etymologies are thausâ "foul" from THUS and
taurâ "mighty" from TUR. In WJ:337, Tolkien
derives maikâ "sharp, penetrating, going deep in" from
a stem mik "pierce". Besides, the Quenya word
nauta "bound" derived from NUT points to a primitive form
*nautâ (not given); likewise, Sindarin glaer
(glær) "long lay" from GLIR must descend from
*glairê (cf. Quenya lairë). In the essay Quendi
and Eldar, naukâ "ill-shapen, *short" is derived from a
stem NUKU "stunted". This
is called an "adjectival formation" (WJ:413); note that
maikâ, naukâ, slaiwâ,
taurâ, thausâ are also
adjectives. A-infixion is also found in the abstract khaimê
"habit" form KHIM "adhere" (that also yields the adjective
khîmâ "sticky" without A-infixion - as if to
keep things from getting too predictive!) Furthermore, one of the "ancient
forms" of the stem RUKU (having to do with "fear", the source of the
Elvish words for Orc) is given as rauk- (WJ:415). Using examples
from Quenya, Tolkien explained that
words formed by A-infixion "were mostly 'intensive', as in rauko
'very terrible creature' (*RUK); taura 'very mighty, vast, of unmeasured
might or size' (*TUR). Some were 'continuative', as in Vaire 'Ever-weaving'
(*WIR)" (VT39:10). - Whether A-infixion ever produced diphthongs
ae, ao from simple e, o, just like this process
produced ai, au from i, u, was a matter of debate.
Fëanor held that such forms had indeed occurred in the Primitive Quendian, but
as mentioned above, later Loremasters were "inclined to the opinion that this
ae, ao were not primitive developments, but comparatively late and
due to the analogy of ai : i, and au : u"
(see VT39:9-10).
I/Y-infixion: This seems to be rarer than A-infixion. It is
stated that the stem NAYKA *"painful" may be an "elaboration" of
NAK "bite"; NAYKA yields Quenya words in naic-. The stem
WAIWA "blow" is apparently an I-infixed variant of WAWA,
that in turn seems to be a reduplicated form of WÂ. In VT39:11,
Tolkien indicates that "desiderative" formations often show i-infixion;
see below.
Nasal infixion: Stems could be modified by infixing a nasal before the
second consonant of the stem, m before b and p, and
n otherwise (except possibly ñ before w, see
below). Thus, the stem DAT "fall down" has a nasal-infixed variant
DANT. LAK1 "swallow" becomes LANK-, yielding words for
"throat". One of the "ancient forms" of the them RUKU is nasal-infixed:
runk- (WJ:415).
Strengthening, fortification, reinforcement, enrichment:
These are Tolkien's
terms for certain changes that stems sometimes undergo. For instance,
RUKU also appear as a "strengthened stem" gruk- (WJ:415); in this
case the "strengthening" consists of a g-prefix. A prefix s is
seen in s-rot- "delve underground, excavate, tunnel" as compared
to the simpler stem rot (PM:365; groto in WJ:414 is apparently a
g-prefixed variant). (According to VT39:11, later loremasters held that
the original strengthening of r initially was dr rather than
gr; the latter was modelled on the frequent variation l /
gl.) Fëanor is said (in VT39:9) to have cited examples of initial strengthening
involving "the relations between initial st- and s-, or t-; gl-
and l-; ky- and kw- and k-". Another "frequent initial enrichment"
(WJ:413), that particularly impressed Fëanor, is turning b, d, g
into nasalized plosives mb, nd, ñg. This could be called
nasal prefixion, the initial version of the nasal infixion discussed above. However,
initial n, like d, may be strengthened to nd, and m can
similarly become mb (changes that can also occur in the middle of words,
see below). Perhaps initial ñ could be strengthened to
ñg (no examples). In LR:377, the stem ÑGYÔ,
ÑGYON "grandchild, descendant" is suggested to be related to YÔ,
YON "son", suggesting that Y- can be strengthened to ÑGY-.
Extension: Some stems have special "extended" forms made by suffixing
the stem-vowel (as in DELE compared to DEL - in Quenya, this is
called ómataina or "vocalic extension") and adding a final
consonant, usually n, k, t, or s. In the
Etymologies, the stem BORÓN is said to be an extension of
BOR "endure" (when accented on the second syllable it is a verbal form
of the noun-stem bóron-). A similar extension involving a final
n is provided by the stem EL, ELE yielding Common Eldarin
elen "star" (said to represent an "extended base", WJ:360; compare Old
Sindarin toron "brother" from TOR; cf. also the pairs
PHER/PHÉREN "beech" and THOR/THORON
"eagle").
Differentiation: As noted above, the long forms of stems with a final
vowel usually involve simple repetition of the stem-vowel: DEL >
DELE, KAL > KALA etc. But there are some rare cases
where another final vowel, -U, turns up. In WJ:411, Tolkien mentions a
stem TELE "close, end, come at the end" and adds that "this was possibly
distinct from *tel-u 'roof in, put the crown on a building'... But
*telu may be simply a differentiated form of *TELE, since the
roof was the final work of a building." It would seem that variant or
"differentiated" stems could be made by modifying the final vowel. Variation: There seems to be some
variation between certain similar consonants, such as T/TH/D,
and also between TH and S. In the Etymologies, there is obviously a
connection (confirmed by Tolkien's own cross-reference) between the stems
PAT, having to do with openness, and PATH, yielding words like
"Noldorin" pathw "level space" (Classical Sindarin *pathu).
It is also suggested (in LR:393)
that THIN, yielding words for "grey", may be a variant of TIN
"emit slender (silver, pale) beams". Similarly, there is obviously a connection
between the stems DAL "flat", LAD *"wide" and LAT "lie
open". The stems SIL, THIL "shine" are said to be variants, and a
similar variation S/TH is seen in the pairs
GOS/GOTH "dread" and KHIS/KHITH "mist, fog".
Variation SP/PH is seen in SPAL/SPALAS, variant of
PHAL/PHÁLAS "foam". KAR "make, do" seems to have a
variant KYAR "cause", and under the stem KEL "go, run" we find
references to KYEL "come to an end, run out" and KWEL "fade, fade
away, wither". The variation between different semi-vowels (Y/W)
that is seen in the pair KYEL/KWEL is also found in KHAW
as compared to KAY "lie down"; in the Etymologies, KHAW is
equated with the latter stem. This also provides an example of variation
K/KH; cf. also RIK(H) "jerk, sudden move". Under
TAM "knock" there is a reference to NDAM "hammer, beat"; the
latter seems to display both "initial enrichment" with a prefixed nasal and
variation T/D. Primitive Elvish evidently did not allow *NT
as an initial combination, so it had to become ND instead. This principle
may also explain the second element of the name Moringotto (MR:194), said to be
the Quenya form of the name Morgoth, the Black Enemy: If the -ngotto
part suggests a primitive form *ñgottô "enemy", this word could be
referred to the stem KOT, KOTH "strive, quarrel" by assuming that
the "initial enrichment" of K- is *ÑG- rather than ?ÑK-.
The "initial enrichment" of P- would likewise be *MB- rather than ?MP-,
though we have no examples.
Most
primitive words ended in a vowel, sometimes short but often long. The
vowel may be a complete ending in itself or part of a longer ending. No
hard-and-fast rules can be formulated as to what the different final vowels
denote; at most there are certain tendencies. Very generally speaking, words
with final A are often verbs or adjectives, and if they are nouns, they
denote concrete things more often than substances or intangibles. Words in
E are usually nouns and tend to denote abstracts or substances rather
than simple, tangible objects. Words in I are often colour-adjectives;
if they are nouns they usually denote female beings. Words in O are for
the most part nouns and typically denote animate (male) beings; very often such
words have an agental meaning. Words in U are relatively rare; they are
nearly always nouns and typically denote either male beings or body parts.
The ending -â (or -a) occurs on many types of words, but
most prominent is the adjectival ending -â, mentioned by
Tolkien in WJ:382. Adjectives may be derived by simple suffixation, like
mizdâ "wet" from the stem MIZD or
telesâ "rear" from TELES. However, the ending is
often combined with certain manipulations of the stem:
The suffix -dô is a (usually agental) ending that is preferred in
the case of stems ending in N: ñgandô *"harper" from
ÑGAN/ÑGANAD and lindô "singer" from
LIN2. (In the latter entry in the Etymologies, only the
later Quenya form lindo is listed, but the archaic form lindô
is given as part of the compound
tuilelindô "swallow", etymologically "spring-singer", in the entry
TUY. Ñgandô is likewise attested only as a part of
the word tjalañgandô "harp-player"; see TYAL,
ÑGAN/ÑGANAD.) There is also the word ndandô
"Nando, Green-elf", interpreted "one who goes back on his word or decision"
(the Nandor were so called because they left the march from Cuiviénen;
the stem DAN-, NDAN- indicates "the reversal of an action, so as
to undo or nullify its effect", WJ:412). In ñgolodô "Noldo"
(WJ:364, 380), the ending -dô follows the reduplicated stem-vowel
(ómataina) of the stem ÑGOL. In this word,
-dô apparently does not have any agental meaning; it is simply a
personal (masculine) suffix, indicating one that has the property denoted by
the stem ÑGOL (wise, wisdom).
The ending -ê, -e has several meanings, or rather a few
specialized meanings as well as some very general ones. A number of words in
-ê, -e denote abstract or intangible things; in such cases
the stem-vowel is often lengthened: nêthê "youth"
(NETH), ñgôlê "Science/Philosophy" (PM:360),
ñôle "odour" (ÑOL),
rênê "remembrance" (PM:372), slîwê
"sickness" (SLIW), tûrê "mastery, victory"
(TUR). The stem-vowel remains short in we3ê "manhood,
vigour" (WEG), et-kelê "spring, issue of water" (KEL)
and naje "lament" (NAY), while khaimê "habit"
shows A-infixion instead of lengthening (KHIM). In the word
esdê > ezdê "repose", the origin of the Quenya
name of the Valië Estë, the stem SED occurs in an alternative
form ESD- (WJ:403). For -ê as an abstract ending, compare
also the longer endings -mê, -rê, -wê,
that are often used to derive abstract words.
The ending -i occurs in a number of adjectives, many of which are
colour-words. In the case of monosyllabic stems ending in N, it is always
combined with the fortification N > ND: slindi "fine, delicate"
(SLIN), thindi "pallid, grey, wan, pale or silvery grey"
(THIN, WJ:384), windi "blue-grey, pale blue or grey"
(WIN/WIND; windi was struck out). Ninkwi "white"
combines the ending -i with nasal-infixion of the stem NIK-W. On
the other hand, karani "red" (KARÁN) shows no extra
modifications, just the ending. Yet another colour-adjective, lugni
"blue" (LUG2), seems to contain a longer ending -ni
that is attested in this word only. In ringi "cold" the ending may be
the stem-vowel suffixed. Mori is stated to be both the adjective "dark"
and the abstract "darkness" (Letters:382; in the Etymologies, stem
MOR, the gloss is simply "black"). This brings us over to nouns
in -i. Some are abstract, such as rinki "flourish, quick
shake" (RIK(H), note nasal-infixion). The word
etsiri "mouth of a river" is in origin plainly the abstract
"outflow(ing)" (ET, compare SIR). A few nouns in -i refer
to periods of time: ari "day" (AR1) and
dômi- "twilight" (DOMO).
A feminine ending -î is seen in the two words
Barathî (BARATH), an early name of Varda, and in
târî "queen" (wife of a târo, "king"). The word
târî is probably formed after târo, since there
is no R in the stem TA/TA3 and the feminine equivalent of the masculine
ending -rô, -ro seems to be properly -rê (as
in weirê "weaver", WEY), not *-rî. For
-î as a feminine element, cf. also the pronoun sî,
si "she" (stem S; also sê, se). (Note, however,
that Tolkien later implied another etymology for Quenya Vairë; see
weirê in the wordlist below.)
An abstract/infinitive ending -ie is found in Quenya and Old Sindarin,
and we would expect it to correspond to something like -iê in the
primitive language. This ending may be attested in the word
luktiênê "enchantress" (LUK), if this is
*luktiê "enchantment" + the feminine ending -nê,
hence *"enchantment-female". *Luktiê would be an abstract or
verbal noun formed from *luktâ- "enchant" (my reconstruction, cf.
Quenya luhta-).
An adjectival ending -imâ occurs in the word silimâ
"shining white", "silver" (as adj.) (SIL). This would be the origin of
the Quenya adjectival ending -ima (often meaning "-able", but sometimes
used in a more general sense). Alternatively we would have to explain
silimâ as including the ómataina-form of SIL,
namely *SILI, followed by the ending -mâ; see below. But
this ending is typically used to derive words for implements and is found on no
(other) adjective, so it is better to assume an ending -imâ.
The feminine ending -ittâ is mentioned in PM:345; this is the
origin of Sindarin -eth. See also -otta, -otto.
The ending -jâ, -ja, -iâ, -ia has
several meanings. It occurs on a number of adjectives:
banjâ "beautiful" (BAN), erjâ "isolated,
lonely" (VT42:4), kalarjâ "brilliant" (KAL), miniia
"single, distinct, unique" (MINI), oijâ "everlasting" (OY),
slinjâ "lean, thin, meagre" (SLIN), windiâ "pale blue"
(WIN/WIND - it is uncertain whether Tolkien rejected the word windiâ
or not). Wanjâ "fair, beautiful" is called an "adjectival derivative...from
the stem WAN" in WJ:383, and Tolkien explicitly referred to -ja as a Common
Eldarin adjectival element (VT42:10). It also occurs in some ordinals that are said
to be Common Eldarin: lepenja "fifth", otsôja "seventh" (VT42:26, 25).
The word kwendjâ, the origin of Quenya, is explained as being an
adjective meaning "belonging to the *kwendî, to the people as a
whole" (WJ:360, 393). May this wording suggest that kwendjâ comes
from *kwendî-â, sc. the plural form
kwendî "Elves" + the adjectival ending -â?
Another adjectival ending is -kâ. In Letters:282, Tolkien mentions
a "basis" LAY (also present in Quenya lairë "summer") that
yields laikâ "green". Other examples include gajakâ
"fell, terrible, dire" (PM:363), poikâ "clean, pure"
(POY), tiukâ "thick, fat" (TIW); later -kâ
became short -ka as in lauka "warm" (LAW). The ending
-kô, attested only in the word tiukô "thigh"
(TIW), would seem to be a nominalized form of -kâ
(tiukâ "thick" > tiukô *"thick thing" = "thigh").
The ending -la seems to mean little more than "thing" (or "person"); it
is used as a noun-former. Tolkien defines hekla as "any thing (or
person) put aside from, or left out from, its normal company" (WJ:361; stem
HEKE "aside, apart"); this could be turned into a "personal form"
heklô "waif or outcast" with the masculine ending -ô;
see below. (There is also an adjectival form heklâ formed with the
adjectival ending -â, discussed above.) In the Etymologies,
-la is found in the names of a number of implements where the ending
-mâ (see below) could presumably have been used as well:
makla "sword" from MAK "sword, fight with sword", tekla
"pen" from TEK "write" (hence *"thing for writing"), and, with a
nasal-infixed stem, tankla "pin, brooch" from TAK "fix, make
fast". In the word magla (read *smaglâ?) "stain" from
the stem
SMAG- "[?to] soil, stain" the ending simply acts as a noun-former. (In
the Etymologies, the Sindarin word mael that is referred to
magla is glossed both "stain" as a noun and adj. "stained", but the
adjective "stained" is presumably derived from *(s)maglâ
with adjectival -â.) In one case, the ending -la is added,
not directly to the root, but to another derived word:
Sjatsela/sjatsêla "broadsword-blade", "axe-blade" includes
the word sjatsê < sjadsê "cleft, gash" derived
from the root SYAD "shear through, clear"; a sjatsêla is
thus a *"thing used for making gashes".
The ending -lê is used to derive nouns that "seem properly to have
been universal or abstract" (VT39:16); this also goes for its direct
Quenya descendant -lë. In most attested examples it simply acts as
a verbal noun ending. The root TUY "spring, sprout" yields
tuilê "day-spring" or "spring-time"; the basic meaning would be
simply *"springing, sprouting". Keglê comes from keg-
"snag, barb" and would mean basically *"snagging, barbing", but abstracts often
take on a concrete meaning, and in Sindarin cail (<
keglê) means "fence" or "palisade" (UT:282).
The suffix -mâ is one of the most productive endings. Tolkien
points out that this suffix is frequent in the names of implements (WJ:416).
Hence the stem TAK "fix, make fast" may yield takmâ "thing
for fixing", the origin of Quenya tangwa "hasp, clasp". SUK
"drink" yields sukmâ "drinking-vessel". Another word of the same
meaning, julmâ, is likewise derived from a stem meaning "drink"
(WJ:416 - this is the origin of Quenya yulma "cup", known from
Namárië). From the stem YAT "join" comes
jatmâ, apparently meaning "bridge" or "joining" (Quenya
yanwë). Note that the stem to which -mâ (-ma)
is appended is not required to have a verbal meaning; kasma "helmet"
comes from a stem KAS "head". Telmâ "hood, covering" comes
from a stem (TEL/TELU) that is not defined, but apparently has to do
with the top or canopy of something. (In the Etymologies,
the final vowel of telmâ has a diacritic denoting that it may be
either long or short, so the variation -mâ vs. -ma is
unimportant.)
The ending -mê is properly an abstract or verbal noun ending, much
like English "-ing", as in julmê "drinking, carousal", from the
stem JULU "drink" (WJ:416) or labmê "the action of *LABA",
sc. a stem having to do with licking or moving the tongue (WJ:416). The name of
the Vala Oromë is really adapted from Valarin (an early Eldarin
form was Arâmê), but in later ages the Eldar took the name
to mean "horn-blowing", wrongly supposing that it contained the verbal noun
ending -mê (WJ:400).
The agental ending -mô is attested in the word Ulumô
"Pourer, Ulmo" only (ULU). However, its Quenya descendant -mo is
well attested and is stated to be an ending that "often appeared in names or
titles, sometimes with an agental significance" (WJ:400; here "the Pourer" as
the meaning of Ulmo is said to be an Elvish folk etymology, for the name
was actually adopted and adapted from Valarin Ul(l)ubôz).
The ending -nâ (-na) is very productive. In a few cases
(khalnâ, barnâ under
KHAL2, BAR) the final vowel is marked as accented;
perhaps this ending received the accent in primitive Elvish. Its function is to
form adjectives: In UT:266, a word in -nâ is called as an "ancient
adjectival form", while in WJ:365 another such word, heklanâ, is
called an "extended adjectival form" (extended as compared to the shorter
adjectival form heklâ, presumably). Examples include
ku3nâ "bowed, bow-shaped, bent" (KU3 "bow"),
magnâ "skilled" (MAG, under MA3), ndeuna "second"
(NDEW "follow, come behind"), ornâ "uprising, tall"
(UT:266), patnâ "wide" (PAT), pathnâ "smooth"
(PATH), ragnâ "crooked" (RAG), sarnâ
"of stone" (SAR, see STAR), ta3na ?"high, lofty, noble"
(TÂ/TA3), tubnâ "deep" (TUB). This ending may
well be added to stems that already have an adjectival meaning, such as
k'rannâ "ruddy (of face)" from KARÁN "red" or
mornâ "dark" from MOR "black" (see Letters:382 for
mornâ; this derivative is not given in the Etymologies,
though its Quenya descendant morna is).
The word luktiênê "enchantress" (LUK), the
primitive form of Lúthien, seems to contain a feminine ending
-nê. It would be the counterpart of masculine -nô;
see below. It is apparently suffixed to a noun *luktiê
"enchantment" rather than directly to a verbal stem. A distinct ending
-nê occurs in ornê "(slender) tree", stated to be
related to the adjective ornâ "uprising, tall" (UT:266). In this
word, -nê would seem to be a nominal ending corresponding to
adjectival -nâ, an ornê being literally a "tall
thing", used with reference to slender trees. How slignê "cobweb"
fits in is difficult to say, since Tolkien did not define the stem SLIG.
In neinê "tear", the ending -nê adds nothing to the
meaning of the stem NEI "tear" and must be seen simply as a nominal
ending.
The suffix -nô is a masculine ending. It occurs in
bernô "man" and besnô "husband" (BES, cf.
BER). Since the stem BES means "wed", besnô "husband"
might be interpreted *"bridegroom", if we assign an agental meaning to
-nô. It is clearly agental in khalatirnô
"fish-watcher": stem TIR "watch, guard". (In the Etymologies, the final vowel of
khalatirnô has a diacritic indicating that it may be either long
or short: -nô or -no.) Cf. also stabnô
"carpenter, wright, builder" from STAB (also stabrô, so the
endings -nô and -rô are sometimes interchangeable).
In some cases, -nô denotes impersonal agents, like
sjadnô "cleaver" = sword from SYAD "shear through, cleave".
In adnô "gate" the ending does not add any meaning to the stem
AD "entrance, gate".
The ending -ô, -o is predominantly a masculine ending;
compare the pronoun sô/so "he" (stem S, also
sû/su). The ending -ô seems to correspond to
feminine -ê just like the masculine ending -û
corresponds to feminine -î. Often -ô is seen to have
an agental meaning: Kânô "crier, herald" from KAN
"cry" (PM:362, 361, 352), mâlô "friend" from
MEL "love as friend" (Tolkien comments on the irregular vocalism E >
A), ndâkô "warrior, soldier" from NDAK "slay",
tanô "craftsman, smith" from TAN, "make, fashion",
tûrô "master, victor, lord" from TUR "[have]
power, control". (According to PM:362, kânô is an example of
"the older and simplest agental form".) Except in tanô, the vowel
of the stem is lengthened (cf. also delô below). Sometimes the
stem is manipulated in other ways when -ô is added. Nasal-infixion
is seen in ronjô "chaser" = hound of chase (ROY1
"chase") and sjandô "cleaver" = sword (SYAD "cleave";
sjandô may also be a metathesized form of sjadnô). In
raukô, a Common Eldarin word applied to "the larger and more
terrible of the enemy shapes" known to the first Elves, the stem RUKU is
A-infixed (WJ:390). Whether raukô can be considered an agental
formation is uncertain and perhaps doubtful (RUKU has to do with
fear; Tolkien defines Quenya rauco as "very terrible creature"
in VT39:10). In the Primitive Quendian word edelô "one who goes,
traveller, migrant" the stem-vowel (sundóma) is prefixed; cf.
the stem DELE "go, travel" (WJ:360).
The simpler variant delô, delo is seen in
the Common Eldarin words awa-delo, awâ-delo (also
?wâ-delô) *"Away-goer", a name made in Beleriand for those
who finally departed from Middle-earth (WJ:360). Edelô "traveller"
also has a possible variant edlô "with loss of
sundóma" (WJ:363, 364). Of course, the stem-vowel isn't really
"lost", but the consonant-vowel-consonant structure of the stem is rearranged
to vowel-consonant-consonant (EDL for DEL).
Yet another masculine ending, -ondô, is seen in
stalgondô "hero, dauntless man" (STÁLAG). In
kalrondô "hero" (KAL) it seems to be combined with the
masculine ending -ro. An old form of Sauron is given (in
Letters:380) as thaurond-. The hyphen indicates that the word is not
complete; we must assume that the full form would be *thaurondô.
This -ondô is evidently just a longer form of -dô,
see above (cf. the feminine ending -indê, apparently paralleling
an unattested shorter form *-dê).
The endings -otto, -otta may be observed in the Tolkien's
suggested reconstructions of the primitive form of Sindarin nogoth
"dwarf": nukotto, nukotta "a stunted or ill-shapen thing (or
person)" (WJ:413). These endings simply denote someone or something that has
the properties described by the stem (in this case NUKU "stunted",
WJ:413). Compare the -tt- seen in kwelett- "corpse" from
KWEL "fade, wither". The word would mean literally *"faded/withered/dead
one"; its full form may be *kweletto or *kweletta. The feminine
ending -ittâ mentioned in PM:345 may be related to these other
double-T endings.
The ending -râ is a fairly productive adjectival suffix:
wa3râ "soiled, dirty" (WA3), târâ
"lofty" (TÂ/TA3, cf. TÁWAR), ubrâ "abundant"
(UB), magrâ "useful, fit, good (of things)" (MAG,
under MA3), mikrâ "sharp-pointed"
(WJ:337), sagrâ "bitter" (SAG),
nethrâ, nethra "young" (NETH),
gairâ "awful, fearful" (WJ:400), akrâ "narrow"
(AK), teñrâ "straight, right" (TEÑ,
TE3), gaisrâ "dreadful" (GÁYAS),
taurâ "masterful, mighty" (TUR, TÂ/TA3, cf
TÁWAR), nûrâ "deep" (NÛ).
Letters:380 gives thaurâ "detestable", said to be derived from a
stem THAW (not in Etym). A special case is the adjective
katwârâ "shapely", that seems to have two adjectival
endings added to the stem KAT, first -wâ and then
-râ. Short -ra in lakra "swift, rapid"
(LAK2) and daira "large, great" (VT42:11, base
given as DAY); cf. also nethra beside nethrâ.
The ending -rê seems to have several meanings. It functions as an
abstract ending in the two words idrê "thoughtfulness" (ID)
and thêrê "look, face, expression" (THÊ). On
the other hand, it is a collective ending in the word nôrê
"family, tribe or group having a common ancestry" (WJ:413); it would be the
ancestor of the collective ending -rë known from Quenya. The stem
WEY "wind, weave" gives weirê "weaver" as the original form
of the Quenya name of the Valië Vairë; this -rê
is plainly an agentive suffix, evidently the feminine counterpart of masculine
-rô. In the word stalrê "steep, falling"
(STAL) -rê seems to function as an adjectival ending (may
this be a misreading for stalrâ, with a well attested adjectival
suffix? VT46:16, reporting the results of a new examination of Tolkien's
manuscript, indicates that this alternative reading is the more probable one.)
Words with the ending -rô, -ro are identified by Tolkien as
agental formations (WJ:371 - here he also mentions a form -rdo, that is
nowhere attested). In WJ:371, Quenya Avar (pl. Avari) is said to
go back on a primitive form abaro, derived from a stem ABA having
to do with refusal. The Etymologies agrees quite well with this; most
words in -rô and -ro are indeed seen to have an agental
meaning: beurô "follower, vassal" from BEW "follow, serve",
onrô or ontâro "begetter, parent" from
ONO "beget", ndeuro "follower, successor" from NDEW
"follow, come behind". Stabrô "carpenter, wright, builder"
is seen to have an agental meaning, though the stem STAB is not glossed.
Tolkien states that tamrô "woodpecker" means literally "knocker",
from TAM "knock". Another animal name, njadrô "rat",
literally means *"gnawer" (NYAD "gnaw").
An apparently adjectival ending -sâ occurs in the word
neresâ. This is said to be a "feminine adjectival formation" from
NER "man", meaning "she that has manlike valour or strength"
(WJ:416). This particular ending does not seem to be attested anywhere
else; neither did Tolkien explain precisely how this adjective can be considered
"feminine". Perhaps we are to assume a stem *NERES as a "feminine" variant
of NER "man", to which the normal adjectival ending -â is added.
The double stem THEL, THELES "sister" in LR:392 may suggest that
extended stems in -S may sometimes be typically "feminine" (though there
are other examples of such extensions in -S that clearly have nothing to do
with gender).
An ending -sê occurs in a number of words, but it seems to have
several meanings. In some words it apparently denotes something that is made by
the action denoted by the stem: khotsê "assembly" from
KHOTH "gather", sjadsê (later sjatsê) "cleft,
gash" from SYAD "shear through, cleave", wahsê "stain"
from WA3 "[to] stain, soil". We may add b'ras-sê
"heat" if the undefined stem BARÁS means something like "burn" or
"heat up" (it yields words for "hot, burning, fiery"). Does
khjelesê "glass" fit in somehow, or does the S belong to
the stem, that Tolkien confusingly listed as KHYEL(ES)? It could be an
"expanded" form of a shorter stem *KHYEL. A few words indicate that
-sê may also be used to derive words for implements (taksê
"nail" from TAK "make fast") or constructions (tupsê "thatch"
from TUP, not defined). A distinct feminine
ending -sê seems to occur in a few words, such as
ndîse "bride"; this might seem to be the stem NDIS with the
feminine ending -e, but the Etymologies lists a sub-entry
NDIS-SÊ/SÂ that seems to indicate that an ending
-sê really is present. Does this ending occur in
bessê "wife", or is the double S simply the final consonant of the
stem BES doubled? The latter is almost certainly the case in the words
khrassê "precipice" (KHARÁS), kwessê
"feather" (KWES), lassê "leaf" or "ear"
(LAS1, cf. Letters:282) and risse- "a ravine"
(RIS). But what about the long ending -ssê in
tjulussê "poplar-tree", added to an ómataina-form of
the stem TYUL? Some Quenya nouns also show the ending -ssë,
e.g. hopassë "harbourage" (KHOP) - for
*khôpassê?
The ending -stâ would seem to be basically a verbal noun ending;
Sindarin haust "bed" is said to derive from khau-stâ,
literally "rest-ing" (KHAW).
The ending -tâ, -ta is in most cases a verbal suffix. Most
verbs in -ta are clearly transitive: anta- "to present, give"
(ANA1), bâta "ban, prohibit" (WJ:372),
ektâ "prick with a sharp point, stab" (WJ:365),
hektâ "set aside, cast out, forsake" (WJ:361; hekta,
WJ:365), k'riktâ "reap" (KIRIK), ma3tâ
(> Common Eldarin mahtâ-) "to handle" (MA3),
maktâ "wield a weapon" (MAK), rista- "cut"
(RIS), skelta- "strip" (SKEL), wahtâ- "to
soil, stain" (WA3). Wedtâ "swear" (to do something) was
struck out (WED). In one verb, the ending -tâ takes on a
causative meaning: tultâ- "make come" from tul-
"come" (TUL). The verb nuktâ- "stunt, prevent from coming
to completion, stop short, not allow to continue" may also be seen as a
causative form of the stem NUKU "stunted" (WJ:413). Some ta-verbs
are intransitive, though: swesta- "to puff" (SWES) and
b'rekta- "break out suddenly" (BERÉK). There was also
winta- "fade" (WIN/WIND), but Tolkien struck it out.
The ending -tê in kirtê "cutting", the origin of
Sindarin certh "rune", seems to denote something that is made by the
action denoted by the stem (here obviously KIR "cut", though this stem
is not listed in Etym). Tolkien calls kirtê "a verbal
derivative" and adds that it was of a type not used in Quenya, apparently
meaning that no Quenya words contain a descendant of the ending
-tê, or that no such descendant is productive in that
language (WJ:396). Another possible example of the same ending is provided by
the word wahtê "a stain", evidently Common Eldarin for Primitive
Quendian *wa3tê, since the stem is WA3 (LR:397). If we take
Tolkien's glosses to WA3 - "stain, soil" - as verbs rather than nouns,
wahtê has much the same semantical relationship to its root WA3 as
kirtê has to KIR. Interestingly, Quenya vakse (vaxë)
"a stain" does not come from wahtê, but from the synonymous primitive word
wahsê with another ending, apparently confirming that the derivation
exemplified by the primitive words in -tê was not used in Quenya.
An adjectival ending -ti or -iti is seen in a few words:
ma3iti "handy, skilled" (MA3), neiti- "moist, dewy"
(NEI), phoroti "right" or "north" (PHOR). In the case of
phoroti, the adjectival ending may simply be -i added to
*phorot, an extended form (a so-called kalat-stem?) of the basic
stem PHOR. The Quenya ending -itë in adjectives like
uruitë "fiery" (UR) is clearly descended from -iti.
The ending -û is a dual suffix, but it also has other meanings.
Words in -û, -u are nearly always nouns (rarely verbs and
never adjectives). A masculine ending -û seems to be present in
atû "father" (ATA) and kherû "master"
(Letters:282). In kundû "prince", the ending may be the
stem-vowel reduplicated, but probably it is the same ending as in
atû, kherû. Cf. also short -u in
orku "goblin", Orc (ÓROK). In Tolkien's later
reconstructions of the primitive word for "Orc", such as urk(u)
or uruku (WJ:390), the ending -u may just as well be the
stem-vowel suffixed. A masculine ending may be present in rauku, the
possible origin of the final element in Balrog; Tolkien also suggested
raukô as a possible reconstruction, and this word undoubtedly
contains a masculine ending (WJ:390). Some words in -u denote body
parts: mbundu "snout, nose, cape" (MBUD), ranku "arm"
(RAK), tûgu "muscle, sinew" (TUG). Note nasal infixion
in mbundu, ranku. Some u-words denote localities:
jagu "gulf" (YAG), tumbu "deep valley" (TUB) and
tundu "hill, mound" (TUN); note nasal infixion in tumbu
and medial fortification N > ND in tundu. Only one word in -u
denotes a substance: smalu "pollen, yellow powder" (SMAL). In the
word tulku "support, prop" (TULUK) the final -u is
probably just the stem-vowel suffixed. The words suglu "goblet" and the
name Utubnu, the primitive form of Utumno, seem to contain
endings -lu and -nu not otherwise attested (SUG [see
SUK], TUB).
Among the rare verbal stems in -u we note tel-u, telu
"roof in, put the crown on a building". Tolkien suggested that this is a
"differentiated form of *TELE", a stem meaning "close, end, come at the end"
(WJ:411). WJ:417 also mentions a Quenya stem niku- "be chill, cold (of
weather)"; it would descend from *niku- but no further information is
given. We need not concern ourselves with stems like ULU "pour, flow"
(LR:396), since the final U is simply the stem-vowel reduplicated and
suffixed; compare the short form UL in WJ:400.
The ending -wâ, -wa is seen to be basically an adjectival
suffix. It occurs in several colour-words: khithwa "grey"
(KHIS/KHITH), laikwâ "green" (LÁYAK;
laikwa under LAIK), smalwâ "fallow, pale"
(SMAL), narwâ "fiery red" (NAR1 - the
long final vowel gives away that this is an archaic form and not Quenya). There
is also the adjective katwâ "shaped, formed" from the stem
KAT "shape". If the latter English gloss is to be understood as a verb
rather than a noun, the wâ-formation here functions as a past
participle. On the other hand, it functions almost like an active participle in
terêwâ "piercing, keen" from TER, TERES
"pierce".
The ending -wê is identified by Tolkien as an abstract
suffix (see WEG). It is clearly used to produce verbal nouns in words
like et-kuiwê "awakening" from KUY "awake" or
wanwê "death" from WAN "depart"; Tolkien made it clear that
wanwê refers to the act of dying, not "death" as a state.
Some concrete words in -wê can be explained as abstract verbal
nouns that have taken on a concrete meaning. Atakwê "construction,
building" (TAK) is the best example; compare the English glosses that
are properly verbal nouns, but these words are commonly applied
to the structure that is constructed as well as referring to the construction
process itself. Likewise, the word skarwê "wound" from SKAR
"tear, rend" must properly refer to the tearing or rending as an abstract
action, but is then applied to a concrete rent.
Us(u)kwê "reek, smoke" may properly be the
verbal noun of a stem meaning "to (give out) smoke" (stem USUK not
defined). Jagwê "ravine, cleft, gulf" is likewise in origin a
verbal noun derived from YAG "yawn, gape", later applied to a locality.
Short -we is seen in the word tenwe (WJ:394; this seems to be a
misprint for *teñwe, since the word is derived from a stem
TEÑ and yielded Quenya tengwë). It means "indication,
sign, token", and since the stem TEÑ (not in Etym) means
"indicate, signify", *teñwe is evidently originally just another
verbal noun.
The ending -wô is found only in the word nidwô
"bolster, cushion". Since the stem NID means "lean against",
X-wô would seem to mean "thing exposed to the action X". This
ending could be a nominal counterpart of the adjectival ending
-wâ.
As for the semi-vowel j, one detail of spelling must be remembered:
When editing the Etymologies for publication, Christopher Tolkien
changed J to Y, e.g. KUY, DYEL where his father
actually wrote KUJ, DJEL (see LR:346). This was done with good
intentions, since many speakers of English would misunderstand the letter J,
thinking that it referred to the English "dzh"-sound. We retain this revised
spelling when referring to the basic stems listed in the Etymologies (in
capital letters), but otherwise we henceforth restore Tolkien's original
spelling in the actual word-forms mentioned in the Etymologies, e.g.
njadrô instead of nyadrô (therefore, the reader
should not be confused when njadrô is derived from a stem
NYAD, since the letters j and y in all cases refer to the same sound). In the essay Quendi
and Eldar, where many reconstructed forms occur, Tolkien also used j
rather than y, and here Christopher Tolkien left his father's spelling
alone when editing the essay for publication. We also use j in primitive
words where it seems that Tolkien did employ the letter y, to have a
uniform spelling. - Some surmise that j and w often do not stand for
independent semi-vowels, but merely indicate that the preceding consonant is
palatalized or labialized, respectively. If so, such palatalized and labialized sounds could
be counted
as independent phonemes in Primitive Quendian; yet their absence from the table of primitive
consonants in VT46:28 may indicate that we are really dealing with consonant clusters ending
in j and w.
In the Etymologies, Tolkien in a few cases changed w to
v, the stems WAY, WEY becoming VAY, VEY.
Does this mean that he considered introducing v as a primitive sound, as
distinct from b or w? The sound v does not fit the
phonology very well: As noted above, Primitive Quendian possesses virtually no
spirants if we disregard the sibilant s; even the spirant 3 is often
reconstructed as h instead. Perhaps v as a distinct phoneme in Primitive
Quendian was just a passing idea; it does not occur in the table in VT46:28.
Initial clusters
The largest group of initial clusters begin in s: sj-,
sk-, skj-, skw-, sl-, sm-, sn-,
sp-, sr-, st-, sw-.
Some initial clusters may be considered simply nasalised stops: mb,
nd, ñg. Already in the Gnomish Grammar (1917), Tolkien
speaks of "words beginning with nasalized-explosives nd, mb,
ng (a fairly numerous class originally)" (Parma Eldalamberon #11,
p. 7). As noted above, it is not entirely clear whether these are to be
perceived as unitary nasalized consonants or as clusters of a nasal + another
consonant.
A number of clusters end in one of the two semi-vowels. In J: dj,
gj, kj, khj, ndj, ñgj, nj,
tj (and sj, skj already mentioned). In W: gw,
ñgw, kw (and skw, sw already mentioned). It
would seem that kw already before the Separation merged into a single
labio-velar sound q that remained in Quenya (later spelt qu),
while it very early became p in the dialect of the Teleri - still so in
Sindarin and the Telerin of Aman. Some would interpret kw as a single
labio-velar rather than a consonant cluster right from the start. (Tolkien's
earliest "proto-Elfin" - the 1915 stuff - included stems like QORO; see
LT1:264. Here, Q does stand for a labio-velar sound. See also ereqa
in the wordlist below.) As mentioned above, some would indeed take several of the initial
"clusters" involving a single consonant + -w or -j
as merely a convenient way of spelling labialized and palatalized series of consonants;
if so they would not really be clusters at all. Yet the absence of such consonants in
the table in VT46:28 may indicate otherwise.
SD:419 mentions a primitive word with initial hj (or hy, as it
is there spelt). Is this a genuine cluster h + j, or simply
hy as in Quenya, a unitary sound like German ich-Laut?
Stress
In the Etymologies, a number of reconstructed primitive
words include an accent that apparently marks the stressed syllable (here we
use italics instead of an accent mark). Most of the words are marked as
accented on the first syllable: abarô
(abaro), alâkô,
balâ, balâre,
Banâ, banjâ, bata
(batâ), belek, belekâ,
berja, boron-, b'ras-sê,
orku, pheren, telesâ,
ûbanô (see wordlist below for the meaning of the
words). Other words are apparently stressed on the penultimate syllable:
baradâ, ontâro,
berekâ, morokô,
turumbê. Yet other words are stressed on the final
syllable: barasâ, barjâ,
barnâ, battâ,
khalnâ, tambâ. From these examples it
is clear that in Primitive Elvish, accent was not determined by the form
of the word (as is generally the case in Quenya and Sindarin). The words
belekâ, berekâ and
barasâ have the same number of syllables and exactly the
same distribution of consonants and vowels (short and long), but they are not
stressed on the same syllable. There seems to be no certain way of predicting
which syllable receives the accent in Primitive Elvish; we just have to take
Tolkien's word in this matter. Some stems in the Etymologies, like
MORÓK, are marked with an accent to indicate which syllable is
stressed - and this is reflected in the derived word
morokô. The stem MORÓK just happens to be
accented on the second o, and that's it.
It may be noted that there is no connection between accent and long vowels.
One might think that the frequent long final vowels were accented, but there
seems to be no such rule. In alâkô, the one short
vowel is also the one that is accented. Unlike the present writer, the early
Elves apparently did not find it difficult to pronounce long vowels that were
wholly unaccented.
Possible phonological restraints
As far as can be told, the oldest form of Elvish had few phonological restrains,
especially compared to the far more well-defined (and hence restrictive) phonologies
of Quenya and Sindarin.
At the very oldest stage, it may be that all words had to end in a vowel: We have
already quoted VT39:6, where Tolkien states that in Quenya, "all final consonants
had probably lost a vowel, if remote Quendian origins were considered". Yet, as we
also indicated above, a few of Tolkien's "reconstructed" forms do end in consonants.
Maybe these forms are not meant to reflect the very oldest stage.
While there seems to be no correlation between long vowels and stress, it may be that
long vowels cannot occur before consonant clusters. Two long vowels in sequence (hiatus)
may also be impossible.
According to VT47:35, describing the situation in Common Eldarin, the semi-vowel w could not occur before the corresponding
vowel u, and similarly y (= j) could not occur before i.
Whereas the primitive language did allow initial mb-, nd-, ñg-,
the corresponding unvoiced combinations mp-, nt-, ñk- apparently
could not occur at the beginning of words. Thus as an elaboration of the root TAM we
find NDAM rather than *NTAM, apparently an impossible form (LR:390, 375).
VARIOUS PARTS OF SPEECH AND THEIR INFLECTION
Nouns: The primitive language distinguished at least three numbers:
singular, dual and plural. The singular was apparently the basic form of the
noun, as in most languages. The dual was formed with the ending
-û, seen in besû "married pair" (BES),
lasû "ears" (pair of ears, two ears of one person)
(LAS2) and peñû "pair of lips"
(VT39:11 cf. 9). If the use of this dual element corresponds to its
use in old Quenya, as outlined by Tolkien in Letters:427, this primitive
dual applied only to two things belonging together as a pair, not to two
things only casually associated.
The normal plural ending was -î, the origin of Quenya
-i (as in Quendi) and the i-affection seen in Sindarin
plurals (like annon "gate", pl. ennyn, because a and
o were assimilated to the Old Sindarin plural ending -i, later
lost, and became e and y, respectively). Quendi descends
from kwendî, the pl. of kwende (WJ:360); note that the
short final -e is displaced by the plural ending. The frequent
long final vowels are apparently not normally displaced, but the plural
ending -î is shortened to -i when added to a long vowel:
The pl. of Lindâ "Linda, an Elf of the Third Clan" (WJ:380) is
given as Lindâi (WJ:378), not **Lindâî. It
seems that these combinations of a long vowel + i tended to become
normal diphthongs in -i, like âi > ai in this
case; the pl. of Lindâ is also given as Lindai (WJ:385). In
SD:302 the pl. of ornê "tree" is likewise given as ornei,
not *ornêi (the earlier form?) However, sometimes the plural is
formed directly from a naked stem instead of being added to the final vowel;
thus, the pl. of balâ "Vala" is balî, formed
from the stem BAL, instead of **balâi, **balai. (In Quenya,
the form Vali, from balî, is still an alternative to
Valar as the pl. of Vala. It is seen in the name Valinor,
the land or people of the Vali.)
Another primitive plural ending, mentioned in the Etymologies under
3O, was -m. How and where it was used is not clear. It may have
been used to indicate plurality after case endings and enclitic particles. This
-m is apparently the origin of the plural ending -n seen in some
of the Quenya cases, such as the ending -ssen for locative plural
(singular -ssë). The prepositional element jô,
jo- "together" (of more than two) is also given as jôm,
jom- (WJ:361). It may be that this has something to do with the plural
ending -m. Vinyar Tengwar #42 provides a little more information
about it. Tolkien referred to this ending as "being certainly an ancient plural
indicator in Common Eldarin" and cited the example lepem "fingers" (p. 26).
Yet the normal plural indicator must have been the ending -î, directly
reflected by -i in Quenya, Telerin and Old Sindarin.
It would seem that the primitive language had at least some cases;
Tolkien mentions an allative ending -da (WJ:366). The accusative found
in archaic Quenya, formed by lengthening the final vowel of words (cirya
"ship" > ciryá), may suggest that at an earlier stage, there
was an accusative ending that consisted of some guttural sound. When it was
lost, the previous vowel was lengthened (or remained long) in compensation:
?kirjâ3 > ciryá; contrast *kirjâ
> cirya. However, some of the numerous case endings in Quenya may be
particles that were later suffixed; we know that the genitive ending -o
descends from an originally independent particle 3o or ho,
"from". Indeed the distinction between case endings and enclitic particles may
have been vague or absent in the earliest forms of Elvish.
Interestingly, Tolkien states that "prepositional" elements were normally
"attached" (= suffixed?) to noun stems in PQ; this was their "usual
place" (WJ:368). It would seem that in PQ, the "prepositions" normally
acted as postpositions instead. (Real prepositions must have become
dominant in Common Eldarin, since they occur in both Quenya and
Sindarin.)
Verbs: There isn't too much we can say about the verbal system in the
primitive language. Some frequent verbal endings, such as -jâ and
-tâ (whence Quenya -ya, -ta) can be identified; see
"Derivation in Primitive Elvish" below. WJ:415 suggests that in the primitive
language, the past tense was marked by "the 'augment' or reduplicated
base-vowel, and the long stem-vowel". Thus, the stem KWE "say, speak"
had the past tense ekwê (the e of KWE being prefixed
as an augment and the original e being lengthened to ê).
The stem KAR "make, do", which stem might probably just as well be given
as *kara, similarly has the past tense akâra "made, did".
Similarly, we must assume that the past tense of kiri "cut" was
*ikîri (my reconstruction), and so on. In the later languages, the
prefixed stem-vowels live on in the Quenya perfects, while they also appear in
one class of Sindarin past tenses (akâra yielding Sindarin
agor).
In Quenya, past tenses are often formed with the ending -në (e.g.
orta- "raise" > ortanë "raised") or by nasal infixion +
final -ë (e.g. tac- "fasten", pa.t. tancë).
Nasal infixion is also found in Sindarin past tenses (e.g. sogo "to
drink" > pa.t. sunc). Since the past tenses involving nasals occur in
both Quenya and Sindarin, they must go back to at least Common Eldarin. No
primitive form of the Quenya past tense ending -në is mentioned by
Tolkien in the published material; if it existed, it would probably have been
*-nê. Some of the nasal-infixed past tenses may simply be due to
such an ending being added directly to a stem, whereupon the n and the
final consonant of the stem were transposed. For instance, Sindarin sunc
"drank" (Quenya *suncë, not attested) could be derived from, say,
CE *sunkê < PQ *suknê, sc. the stem SUK
"drink" with the past tense ending *-nê. But this is
speculation and requires shifts like kn > nk, that do not
regularly occur; it may be better to assume that the nasal-infixed form
*sunkê is original.
In Quenya, a form held to be the aorist is formed with the ending
-ë, that changes to -i when any ending is added. In the
primitive language, this must have been -i everywhere (since final short
-i became -ë in Quenya, but remained unchanged when not
final).
One of our very few examples of a primitive present tense is
uljâ *"pours", the source of Sindarin eil "it is raining"
(see ULU). May this argue the existence of a primitive present-tense
ending -â, the source of the Quenya ending -a? In WJ:372,
Tolkien refers to the "the [present?] tense stems in -â". It would
seem that the ending -â is "invisible" when added to a verb
already ending in -â, for the verb uljâ certainly
shows the frequent verbal ending -jâ. Note, however, the form
mâtâ "is eating", stated (in VT39:7) to be the "continuous form"
of a stem mata- or MAT "eat" (VT39:7, 11; LR:371). With this compare
Letters:427, where Tolkien states that Quenya palantír comes from a
primitive form palantîrâ (or palantîra), and that this
word includes a "continuative stem of TIR watch, gaze at". Clearly the "continous form"
mâtâ "is eating" relates to MAT just like this "continuative stem"
tîrâ *"is watching" relates to TIR. It seems that from basic
verbal stems (with no ending like -jâ or -tâ) a continuous form
corresponding to English "is ...-ing" can be derived by lengthening the stem-vowel and
adding the ending -â. The Quenya descendants of these forms (not attested in this
case: *máta, *tíra) are clearly what is often called the present
tense. Since mâtâ is translated "is eating", it seems that the continuative
stems could function as finite verbs already in the primitive language.
We have one example of a primitive perfect, namely the form
awâwiiê given in WJ:366. It would seem to be formed by
lengthening and prefixing the stem-vowel and adding the suffix
-iiê. In Quenya, the ending has become -ië, but
otherwise perfects are still formed in the same way.
How other forms of the verb were constructed in primitive Elvish, we don't
know. The infinitive ending -ië is found both in Quenya and Old
Sindarin ("Old Noldorin"), so it must go back to at least Common Eldarin. Its
primitive form may have been -iê (perhaps attested buried in the
word luktiênê, see below). The Quenya and Sindarin future
tense endings, -uva and -tha, are evidently not cognate - perhaps
suggesting that one or both are innovations with no counterparts in the
primitive language.
It may be noted that the primitive language had no inflectional imperative;
instead the independent imperative particle â, variable in place,
was used in conjunction with a verbal stem (WJ:365).
Pronouns: Our knowledge of the primitive pronominal system is far from
complete. A first person stem NI "I" is given in the Etymologies
(LR:378 s.v. NI2), and ni is still found in Quenya
(while the origin of the Sindarin word for "I", im, is obscure). The Quenya ending
-mmë for (exclusive) "we" and the corresponding Sindarin ending
-m argue the existence of a primitive 1st person plural pronoun including
the sound m in Common Eldarin at the latest. Tolkien speaks of de
and its variant le as "pronominal elements in the 2nd person" (WJ:363).
Quenya tye "you" (as object, "thee") and the Sindarin ending -ch
*"you" seem to indicate that there was also a 2nd person element including the
sound k (since Quenya tye in light of the Sindarin ending must be
assumed to descend from *kje, while Sindarin -ch represents older
*-kk-). Concerning the 3rd person, the demonstrative stem TA
"that" is relevant (it yields Quenya ta "that, it"). Quenya te
"them" (and "they"?) may descend from unstressed *tai, sc. ta
"that [one]" with a plural ending: *"those". The 3rd person was apparently
primarily associated with another demonstrative stem, S-. Under this
stem, the Etymologies lists sû or su (or
sô/so) as an evidently primitive pronoun "he", while "she"
is sî or si (or sê, se). Here,
reference is also made to "-so inflexion of verbs" and the corresponding
feminine "-se inflexion", evidently meaning that these pronouns were
attached to verbs to express that "he" or "she" was the subject of the verb.
Whether these inflections occurred already in the most primitive language is
not clear.
Other parts of speech: An example of an adverb is provided by
the word akwâ, according to WJ:415 "an extension or
intensification of *kwâ, used adverbially" (Quenya aqua
"fully, completely, altogether, wholly"). Another example is hekwâ
"leaving aside, not counting, excluding, except", stated to be both adverb and
preposition (WJ:364-5). This is formed from the "adverbial element"
HEKE, HEK, meaning "aside, apart, separate" (WJ:361, 364). No
special adverbial ending, like English -ly, is known; the ending
-wâ seen in the word hekwâ is also an adjectival
ending (see "Derivation" below). - One "primitive negative element" is
mentioned in WJ:370: bâ "no!" (also abâ, aba),
expressing refusal, not denial of facts. Otherwise, words based on the stem
LA "no, not" or the negative stems GÛ, MÛ and
their prefixed variants UGU, UMU were evidently used to form
negations. - It is not known whether there were articles in the
primitive language; this may be doubtful. The source of the article i
"the" in Quenya and Sindarin, namely the stem I, is stated to be a
"deitic particle" (LR:361). So while Quenya i alda and Sindarin i
'aladh mean "the tree", primitive *i galadâ evidently meant
"that tree" instead. Later, the meaning of i was weakened from "that" to
"the" (perhaps already in Common Eldarin, since Quenya and Sindarin share this
article). The Romance languages got their definite articles just like this:
Their ancestor Latin had no word for "the", but the meaning of Latin
demonstratives (typically ille, illa) was weakened to produce
articles like la or el.
COMMON ELDARIN
As noted above, Common Eldarin (CE) is the next stage of
Primitive Elvish. This is the language of the original Eldar as distinct from
the Avari, the tongue developed from Primitive Quendian during the two and a
half centuries the March from Cuiviénen to the sea lasted, and hence the
last common ancestor of Quenya and Sindarin.
In PM:342, Tolkien actually states, "When
the Eldar arrived in Aman and settled there they had already a long history
behind them...also their languages had been elaborated and changed and
were very different from their primitive speech as it was before the
coming of Oromë." No drastic changes are reflected in the material
that has been published to far, however. In many cases, PQ words would be
unchanged in CE; note that ñgolodô (Noldo) is said to be
both CE (WJ:379) and PQ (WJ:381). The plural ending was still -î,
as in elenî "stars" (WJ:360).
As mentioned in the introduction, there are only three forms in the
Etymologies that are explicitly identified as "Eld" = Eldarin, evidently
meaning Common Eldarin: mahtâ- "to handle", ndæ^r
"bridegroom", wa "together" (see MA3, NDER,
WÔ). These three are derived from earlier ma3tâ-,
ndêro and wo, forms that must necessarily be PQ. A number
of other Common Eldarin forms are found in WJ and PM, as well as in Vinyar Tengwar
#42. Some phonological developments may be observed. The change of stressed
wo to wa is explicitly mentioned in Etym (under WÔ).
In PQ ma3tâ > CE mahtâ we are evidently to
understand that the sound 3 (sc. spirant g, according to
Christopher Tolkien) became unvoiced by assimilation to the following t,
if the spelling "ht" in mahtâ represents German ach-Laut + t, as
it does in the Quenya form mahta-. Forms like the verb wahtâ-
"to soil, stain" and the noun wahsê "stain" from the stem
WA3 must therefore be taken to be Common Eldarin for Primitive Quendian
*wa3tâ-, *wa3sê. (Note that in wa3râ
"soiled, dirty", 3 is unchanged, because there is no unvoiced consonant
following.)
The main change seems to have affected the short final vowels. Original
-a, -e and -o disappeared; for instance, PQ abaro
"recussant" yielded CE abar (WJ:371), while PQ kwene "person"
became CE kwên (WJ:360 - the PQ word kwende seems to be
unchanged in CE, though). According to most sources, long -â, -ê,
-ô were unchanged, as were -î and -û - though VT42
cites some CE forms in which the long final vowels may seem to have become short already, e.g.
daira "large, great" or netere "nine". Whatever the case may be, it may have been
at the CE stage original short -i and -u turned into -e and
o, a change reflected in Quenya. The change of short final -i to -e is
also reflected in Old Sindarin, so it would seem that this change occurred in Common Eldarin,
the ancestor of both languages. As the CE word kwên as
compared to PQ kwene demonstrates, the vowel of the new monosyllabic
words could be lengthened (but not in the plural form kwenî, where
the word was not monosyllabic - this is still reflected in Quenya
quén, pl. queni instead of **quéni).
Another change was that "medial h was very early lost without trace in
CE", the noun enclitic -hô "from" becoming -ô, the
origin of the Quenya genitive ending -o (WJ:368). This would seem to
support what we argued above: that in mahtâ-, the letter H
actually stands for ach-Laut. This stronger "H" wasn't lost (still
present in Quenya mahta-).
Some difficult consonant clusters changed into more pronouncable combinations
in Common Eldarin "and possibly earlier", sc. already in PQ (WJ:416). In
WJ:416, the shift bm > mb is mentioned, PQ labmê
"tongue" (language) becoming lambê in CE at the latest. In the
Etymologies, we find double forms like stabnê,
stambê "room" (STAB); may this suggest a similar change
bn > mb, perhaps at the CE stage? (But in this case, the bn
form must have survived alongside the new mb form, since "Old Noldorin"/Old Sindarin
still has stabne.) We know from WJ:403 that the
combination sd was assimilated to zd in Common Eldarin,
esdê "repose" becoming ezdê. (The stem
EZDÊ in the Etymologies must therefore be understood as an
Common Eldarin form; not all the heads of the entries in Etym represent
primitive roots. EZDÊ < esdê is itself a
rearranged form of the basic stem SED "rest".) While s became
voiced to z before d, it seems that d was devoiced to
t before s, primitive sjadsê "cleft, gash" becoming
sjatsê (SYAD). Perhaps the change ds > ts
also occurred at the Common Eldarin stage.
Common Eldarin may have introduced some new diphthongs derived from e,
o. Later Loremasters were "inclined to the opinion that...ae, ao
[produced by A-infixion] were not primitive developments, but comparatively late
and due to the analogy of ai : i, and au : u" (see VT39:9-10).
"Comparatively late" may mean at the Common Eldarin stage rather than in Primitive Quendian.
The fact that words that originally must have contained the diphthongs ae,
ao are found both in Quenya and in Telerin strongly supports this conclusion.
In Quenya, these diphthongs became é and ó, respectively;
in Telerin they both became á. As an example, Tolkien mentions Quenya
méla "loving, affectionate", Telerin mála. Both of these are
derived from an A-infixed form of the stem MEL "love", implied to be
*maelâ (not explicitly given). See VT39:10.
Common Eldarin was not an entirely uniform structure; already on the March,
there were dialects. At a very early stage, perhaps even before the Separation,
the Teleri shifted original kw (> Quenya qu) to p, a
change that is still reflected in Sindarin and the Telerin of Aman (like Quenya
quár "fist" corresponding to Sindarin paur, Telerin
pár; all of these descend from primitive
kwâra, PM:318). In PM:401, Pengolodh points out that "the
Quendi were sundered also in speech: the Avari from the Eldar; and the
Teleri from the other Eldar".
THE STEM AND ITS MODIFICATIONS
When we are dealing with primitive Elvish, the concept of the
stem, root or base must be clearly understood. Already in
his very early "Qenya Lexicon" of 1915, Tolkien stated that "roots...are not
words in use at all, but serve as an elucidation of the words grouped together
and a connection between them" (LT1:246). The root or stem is a somewhat
abstract skeleton containing a basic meaning, and in the process of derivation
this skeleton is fleshed out to produce actual words developing its meaning.
For instance, the general idea of youth is apparently contained in the stem
NETH - Tolkien simply wrote "young" to suggest its meaning - but this is
not to say that the primitive Elvish word for "young" was neth.
NETH is just the basis of actual words like nêthê
"youth" or nethrâ "young" (whence Quenya nésë,
nessa). The Etymologies is for the most part a list of such stems
followed by some of the actual words that they yielded in various languages.
(However, some of the entry-heads in Etym seem to be complete words in
themselves, such as RAMBÂ "wall" or TINKÔ "metal".)
The vast majority of primitive Elvish words consist of a stem combined
with an ending; these endings are explored in detail below.
"My father wrote a good deal on the theory of sundokarme or
'base-structure'," Christopher Tolkien informs us (LR:343). However, little more than his
own summary of his father's ideas is available to us: "Very briefly indeed, the
Quendian consonantal 'base' or sundo was characterised by a 'determinant
vowel' or sundóma: thus the sundo KAT has a medial
sundóma 'A', and TALAT has the sundóma repeated. In
derivative forms the sundóma might be placed before the first
consonant, e.g. ATALAT" (WJ:319). It would seem, then, that the "base" consists
of consonants (like K-T in KAT) plus a "determinant vowel"
(in this case A) that can move around and be reduplicated - but since it
has to be present somewhere, the Quendian base structure is not a "Semitic"
system with purely consonantal roots, as in Khuzdul. This is more like the
Adûnaic system: consonantal roots that are associated with a certain
"Characteristic Vowel" that can be inserted in various places, but has to be
present in all derived words - or stems with the same consonants would become
impossible to tell apart.
The system that eventually crystalized at Cuiviénen featured a "basic
structure" with a preference of stems of "the pattern X-X(-), with a fixed
medial consonant...such as *Dele, *Heke, *Tele,
*Kala, *Kiri, *Nuku, *Ruku, etc. A large number of
monosyllabic stems (with only an initial consonant or consonant group) still
appear in the Eldarin tongues; and many of the dissyllabic stems must have been
made by elaboration of these" (WJ:392). When Tolkien speaks of "the pattern
X-X(-)", he evidently means "consonant-vowel-consonant(-vowel)". Usually, the
first and the second vowel are identical; indeed it doesn't seem to matter
whether the stems for, say, "follow" and "lick" are given as KHILI
and LABA (WJ:387, 416) or simply as KHIL and LAB, as in
the Etymologies (LR:364, 367). In a similar manner, the stem for
"pour" is given both as ULU (LR:396) and as UL (WJ:400).
Likewise, stems like the ones Tolkien lists as examples -
*Dele, *Heke etc. - could probably just as well be given as
DEL-, *HEK- etc. (DEL is actually found in WJ:363). The
latter system seems to be employed in the Etymologies (note that Etym
has KAL where WJ:392 gives *Kala-); the stem ULU instead
of UL is one of the few exceptions. In Etym, the suffixed stem-vowels
may have been dropped simply to save space. But when Tolkien in WJ:392 mentions
"monosyllabic" stems, he seems to be referring to stems with no consonant
following the first vowel (like KWE, NA), so that the vowel
cannot be suffixed.
While Tolkien in WJ:392 speaks of a "large number" of such monosyllabic
stems, they are relatively rare in our corpus. On the same page in WJ, Tolkien
speculates that a stem KWE referring to vocal speech may have existed at
the most primitive stage, but was later expanded to KWENE and
KWETE, thus being adapted to the system that had evolved in the
meantime. In the Etymologies, most of the stems listed consist of three
elements: an initial consonant or a consonant group, a vowel, and one consonant
following the vowel (e.g. BAL, SPAN). In some cases, there is no
initial consonant (e.g. EL), but there are very few stems of one
syllable that lack the final consonant, such as NÂ "to be"
(LR:374 s.v. NÂ2). As
noted above, the latter seems to be the kind of stems Tolkien calls
"monosyllabic" in WJ:392 (and not stems like KWEN, EL, DEL
[WJ:361-363], that can readily be turned into polysyllabic stems by suffixing
the stem vowel: KWENE, ELE, DELE [WJ:360]). Of the more
than six hundred stems listed in the Etymologies, less than thirty have
this "monosyllabic" structure, and several of them are not the stems of verbs,
nouns or adjectives, but prepositions, particles, prefixes and the like. (Some
stems originally ended in a guttural consonant written as 3, but lost it
and had the vowel lenghtened in compensation: DO3 > DÔ
and evidently TA3 > TÂ. Perhaps stems like
THÊ, THÛ, YÔ are to be understood as
later forms of *THE3, *THU3, *YO3, not given.) In accordance
with this, Tolkien stated that "the later view [of the Loremasters
in Middle-earth] was that in fact 'full stems' (meaning noun-adjective or verb
stems) were actually by the end of the common development of primitive Quendian
seldom if ever monoconsonantal" (VT39:11). "Monoconsonantal" is a better
term for this kind of stems than "monosyllabic".
The stem for "bite" is a good example of how a stem can be modified to
produce the basis for new words. No less than four varieties of it are found in
the Etymologies. First there is NAK, apparently the most basic
form, with the simple meaning "bite". The stem NDAK "slay" is evidently
to be understood as a strengthened form of NAK, the strengthening of the
initial consonant symbolizing the intensified meaning. Another variant of
NAK prefixes the stem-vowel to produce ÁNAK, a stem
yielding words for "jaw", the body-part used for biting (Quenya anca,
Sindarin anc, both from primitive ankâ, in turn derived
from ÁNAK; see NAK). A fourth possible variant is
NAYKA with an infixed Y (and the stem-vowel suffixed); this is
called an "elaboration" of NAK. This "elaborated" stem seems to mean
basically *"biting" and hence *"painful"; it yields words like Quenya
naicë, Sindarin naeg "(sharp) pain". We will now have a
closer look at the various ways of manipulating a stem.
In a number of cases, vowel-prefixed versions of a stem are given as separate
entries in the Etymologies. Sometimes, the stress moves to the new first
syllable; sometimes the original stem-vowel retains the accent.
ÁLAK "rushing" is derived from LAK2 "swift".
ÁNAK "jaw" from NAK "bite" has already been mentioned.
ANÁR "sun" is stated to be a derivative of NAR1
"flame, fire". (In the Silmarillion appendix, entry nár,
Christopher Tolkien mentions (a)nar as "the same ancient root" that
yielded words for both fire and sun.) AYAN "holy" is derived from
YAN of similar meaning. ELED "go, depart, leave" connects with
LED "go, fare, travel". ÉNED "centre" comes from
NED of similar meaning. ERÉD, yielding words for "seed",
is derived from RED "scatter, sow". ÓLOS "dream" is
connected to LOS "sleep". ÓROM, the stem that according to
the Etymologies is the source of the name of the Vala Oromë,
comes from ROM "loud noise, horn-blast" (but Tolkien later rejected this
as an Elvish folk etymology). It has been suggested that ÓROK,
the stem that the Elvish words for Orc are traced to in the
Etymologies, is connected to ROK-, the stem for "horse". While
this may seem semantically strained, ROK- may originally have referred
to the steed of "the dark Rider upon his wild horse" that afflicted the Elves
at Cuiviénen, evidently some servant of Morgoth (Silmarillion ch.
3). Hence the strengthened stem ÓROK could be used of other evil
creatures. (However, Tolkien seems to have dropped this idea and decided to
derive the Elvish words for "Orc" from a stem RUKU instead; see WJ:389.)
The negative stems GÛ, MÛ have prefixed variants
UGU, UMU. Slightly more complex is the derivation of
AKLA-R *"brillance" from KAL "shine" and OKTÂ "war"
from KOT "strive, quarrel"; here the stem-vowel is prefixed as usual,
but also lost in its normal position, and other endings are introduced. Other
examples of words where the stem-vowel is removed from its normal place between
the first and second consonant of the stem to be prefixed instead include
esdê "repose" from SED "rest" (see WJ:403), the
above-mentioned ankâ "jaw" from NAK "bite" and
ostô "fortress" from the stem SOTO- "shelter, defend" (see
WJ:414 for the latter). Cf. also the agental formation edlô from
DEL, DELE "walk, go, proceed travel" - but also
edelô with the stem-vowel of DEL intact. In WJ:363, Tolkien
says that the word edlô displays "loss of sundóma"
(stemvowel), and so, obviously, do words like esdê,
ostô, ankâ. The stem RUKU is said to have
variant forms uruk- and urk(u). It is perhaps impossible
for monosyllabic stems like KWA (having to do with completion) to
appear without their stem-vowel in its normal place, but it may still be
prefixed, as in the derivative akwâ (according to WJ:415 "an
extension or intensification of *kwâ, used adverbially" - Quenya
aqua "fully, completely, altogether, wholly").
Nasal-infixion is not uncommon in the derived words. For instance, TUG
yields tungâ "taut, tight", and ronyô "chaser, hound
of chase" comes from a stem ROY "chase" (LR:384 s.v. ROY1).
In some cases, it is hard to tell whether seemingly nasal-infixed forms are actually
due to later
metathesis. Quenya sambë "room" is said to descend from primitive
stabnê, stambê. The latter would seem to reflect a
nasal-infixed form of the stem STAB, but Tolkien's wording can also be
interpreted to mean that the oldest form was stabnê derived from
STAB simply by adding an ending, and that the cluster bn later
underwent metathesis to become *nb > mb. Alternatively,
Tolkien may have meant to say that it was impossible to tell whether the
ancestral form of Quenya sambë was stabnê or
stambê. Another such double form is found under SYAD:
sjadnô, sjandô "cleaver" = sword. Whatever the case,
the stem PAT yields both patnâ "wide" and the nasal-infixed
form pantâ "open", words that were seemingly distinct also
originally, so it would seem that nasal-infixion did occur also in the
primitive language.
There is one example of ñ-infixion before w:
liñwi "fish" from the stem LIW.
The stem DORO "dried up, hard, unyielding" yields PQ
ndorê "dry land" by initial enrichment d > nd
(WJ:413). The stem NDER "bridegroom" is said to be a "strengthened form
of der" (LR:375), sc. the stem DER "man". NDUL, yielding
words meaning "dark, dusky, obscure", comes from DUL "hide, conceal".
MBAD "duress, prison, doom, hell" is a strengthening of BAD
"judge". MBUD, the stem that yields words for "nose", comes from
BUD "jut out". MBAR "dwell, inhabit" is said to be related to
BAR, though it is not clear how they connect semantically (the probable
original meaning of BAR is given as "raise"). Concerning the
strengthening N > ND and M > MB, there is the
stem NDIS ?"bride", said to be a "strengthening" of NIS "woman"
(LR:375). The stem NDÛ "go down, sink" comes from NÛ,
an apparently prepositional stem yielding such words as "down" and "under". We
have already mentioned NAK "bite" > NDAK "slay". The stem
MASAG "knead" connects with MBAS of similar sense; presumably
they are both elaborations of a simpler root *MAS. (Note, however, that
there are many stems with initial MB, ND that cannot be matched
with any corresponding stem in B-/M- or D-/N-. In
such cases, we must assume that the nasalized stop is "original".)
Similar changes can also occur in the middle of words. Kwende "elf" is
derived from a stem KWENE by "primitive fortification of the median
n > nd" (WJ:360). Cf. also some words in the
Etymologies, like tundu "hill, mound" from TUN. The Quenya
verb tamba- "knock, keep on knocking" vs. the simpler verb tam-
"tap" indicates that a fortification m > mb has taken place
(stem TAM). Tolkien explains that Lindâ "Linda, Teler-elf"
is derived from the primitive stem LIN by "reinforcement of the medial N
and adjectival -â" (WJ:382). Common Eldarin eldâ, "an
adjectival formation 'connected or concerned with the stars' ", would seem to
be derived after the same pattern and includes a medial fortification l
> ld (stem EL, ELE); this is not found initially.
In the middle of words, the "median" could also be doubled:
Grottâ "a large excavation" is an "intensified" form (WJ:415) of
grotâ "excavation" (WJ:414). Concerning the stem for "horse",
ROKO, it is said that this is actually an "older simpler form of the
stem, found in some compounds and compound names, though the normal form of the
independent word 'horse' had the fortified form rokko" (WJ:407). As we
see, rokko is "fortified" by doubling the middle consonant of
ROKO. The word battâ "trample", with "medial
consonant lengthened in frequentative formation" (LR:351), provides us with an
example of a "fortified" verbal stem: The basic stem BAT means "tread",
and the fortified stem symbolizes the repetition of the action by lengthening
the middle consonant. For the semantic change, compare Quenya tam- "tap"
vs. tamba- "knock, keep on knocking" mentioned above.
Among the "ancient forms" of the stem RUKU (having to do with
fear) are rukus and rukut (WJ:415). Could the extended
stems with ómataina followed by t be what Tolkien refers
to as "the so-called kalat-stems" in WJ:392? Kalat looks like an
extended form of KAL, the stem having to do with "light". If so, yet
another example may be the stem ÓROT "height, mountain", that is
apparently extended from the more basic stem ORO "up; rise; high". Here
we see how the extended form develops the meaning of the more basic stem (the
other examples of extended stems are not separately glossed). Double stem-forms
in the Etymologies, like LEP/LEPET "finger" or
ESE/ESET "name" seem to exemplify the same phenomenon. A certain
example is arat-, that in PM:363 is said to be "an extended form of the
stem ara- 'noble' ". When the stem NA "to be" yields Quenya
nat "thing", this may reflect a similar t-extension.
There are some possible extensions with final -k, like OTOK
"seven" from OT. Perhaps NÁYAK "pain" is connected with
NAY "lament", while KIRIK (whence Quenya circa "sickle")
is definitely extended from KIR- "cut, cleave" (not defined in the
Etymologies, but see kir- in the Silmarillion Appendix;
cf. also KIRIS "cut" as noun - another expanded form). LEPEK is
given as an extension of LEP "five" (also LEPEN). Cf. also
MIL-IK *"greed", evidently an extension of a simpler stem
*MIL (whence Quenya mailë by A-infixion).
Extensions involving final -s (cf. rukus and KIRIS
above) include OT/OTOS "seven" (also OTOK already
mentioned), THEL/THELES "sister", TER/TERES
"pierce", PHAL/PHÁLAS "foam" (plus the variant
SPAL/SPALAS); cf. also KYEL(ES) "glass". The stem
NIS "woman" is said to be "elaborated from INI" (see NDIS);
perhaps NIS should rather be derived from the simple stem
NÎ "woman", of which INI must be a vowel-prefixed version.
(For the shortening of the long stem-vowel in the vowel-prefixed variant,
compare the negative stems GÛ vs. UGU and MÛ
vs. UMU.) Tolkien speculates that THUS ?"evil-smelling" is
related to (extended from?) THÛ "puff, blow". The latter examples
indicate that "monosyllabic" stems (stems with no final or "medial" consonant)
can be expanded by adding the final consonant -n, -t, -s
directly to the original stem-vowel; the vowel cannot be reduplicated finally
because there is no consonant to which it can be suffixed. (But apparently the
stem-vowel can be reduplicated following the new consonant after the
consonant has been added; cf. Tolkien's reference in WJ:392 to the stem "*KWE,
of which *KWENE and *KWETE were elaborations".)
Note that there are some stems that seem to be polysyllabic right from the
start. For instance, KYELEK "swift, agile" can for semantic reasons
hardly be an expanded form of KYEL "come to an end".
It should be noted that Tolkien sometimes uses the term "extended
stem" also with reference to stems with a prefixed stem-vowel (see
above), when the vowel is still present in its normal place.
Regarding the use of the sundóma (stem-vowel) in such triconsonantal
stems, Tolkien noted that "more than two insertions of the sundóma
were not necessary in the Common Eldarin system" (hence we see two A's in palat-,
palan- as extensions of PAL, VT47:8). However, the first sundóma
following the initial consonant could be "omitted and replaced by an extruded sundóma
initially, in which case the vocalizing was ap'lata" (VT47:13). Here the '
indicates the place of the "omitted" stem-vowel; this is not phonetic loss. In VT47:13, Tolkien also
cited the example aklara (the primitive form underlying Quenya alcar, Sindarin aglar
"glory, splendour"); this is thus ak'lara, a reworked form of triconsonantal KALAR as an extended
form of the simple root KAL having to do with light.
Except for TELU, the evidence for such stems is usually indirect. The
stem KEL "go, run (especially of water)" clearly has a longer form
KELU. (The Index to Unfinished Tales, entry Celos,
actually mentions a root kelu- "flow out swiftly".) The longer form
turns up in Quenya celumë "stream, flow" (but not in celma
"channel"). The Ilkorin word for "river", celon, is derived from what
seems to be an expanded form in -n: "kelu + n", hence
*kelun (LR:363). A similar case seems to be Quenya cotumo "enemy"
from KOT, KOTH: the middle u has to come from somewhere.
There are also some Quenya stems in -u, such as nicu- "be chill,
cold (of weather)" (WJ:417) or hlapu- "fly or stream in the wind"
(MC:223). But how they relate to "differentiated" stems like TELU, if
they do at all, is far from clear.
A new clue (of sorts) appeared in VT46:8: "On -u- suffix frequent in Q[uenya]
after el, al, see Q structure: cf. kelu, telu,
smalu, etc." If "Q structure" refers to any specific written essay,
it has never been published. Smalu appears in the Etymologies
(entry SMAL) as a word for "pollen, yellow powder". Maybe we must
simply await the publication of whatever essays Tolkien wrote about "Q structure"...
Variation P/T is found in the stems PIK and TIK;
both of these evidently have to do with smallness. Under TIK,
Tolkien made a cross-reference to PIK. Variation between T and
D is seen in the pair TING, DING, but since these words
are simply onomatopoeic, such variation is to be expected.
According to WJ:363, there was "some evidence" that variation between
D and L occurred in Primitive Quendian, "a notable example being
de/le as pronominal elements in the 2nd person". In late PQ, the combination
GL appeared as an initial variation of L (WJ:411, cf. VT39:11).
Variation between different vowels is much rarer, but BEL "strong" is tentatively
compared by Tolkien to to the stem BAL (whence balâ
"Power, god, Vala"), and under NAT "lace, weave, tie" Tolkien made a
cross-reference to NUT "tie, bind".
DERIVATION IN PRIMITIVE ELVISH
In Primitive Elvish, nearly all words can be split into a stem
followed by a derivational ending, and we will here attempt to list these
suffixes. In the primitive language, the stem and the ending are usually easy
to distinguish, while the border between them is often blurred by sound-changes
in the later languages. For instance, primitive sukmâ
"drinking-vessel" is easily split into a stem SUK "drink" with the
ending -mâ denoting an implement - but in Quenya, that has shifted
original km to ngw, the resulting word sungwa can no
longer be analyzed as easily. (Despite examples like this, the original endings
are usually recognizable in Quenya, with shortening of the final vowels:
-mâ normally appears as -ma. Much of what is said below
still holds true for the direct Quenya descendants of these suffixes, but in
Sindarin, the original endings are much worn down and sometimes even replaced
with new endings.)
It should be noted that the second, reduplicated vowel of the stem, the
ómataina or "vocalic extension", is often not included when an
ending is added to produce an actual word. There are definitely some words
where the second vowel persists, as when ULU "pour" yields
ulumô *"pourer", but often it disappears. In WJ:416, a stem
NUKU "stunted" is given, but in the derivative nuktâ-
"stunt", the second U of NUKU is not included. On the other hand,
the ómataina may sometimes turn up in the derivatives even when the
stem is given in the shortest form, as when the noun tjulussê
"poplar-tree" is derived from TYUL "stand up (straight)"; this noun is
actually based on the ómataina-form *TYULU.
The second vowel of two-syllable stems like GÓLOB or
STÁLAG may also be omitted in the actual words that are derived
from them; these stems manifest as golb- and stalg- in the
derivatives golbâ "branch" and stalgondô "hero,
dauntless man". (See also below concerning laik-wâ from LÁYAK.)
There are also words where the first vowel drops out when it is
unaccented: for instance, the stem BERÉK yields
b'rektâ- "break out suddenly" and KARÁN yields
k'rannâ "ruddy" (but from the same stems come
berekâ "wild" and karani "red" with the first vowel
of the stem intact). This loss of unaccented stem-vowels is most often seen in
the original forms of Sindarin words and may be thought to be a phenomenon that
occurred after the oldest stage, in Common Telerin, so that
b'rektâ-, for instance, represents earlier
*berektâ-. But in at least one case, a form where an
unaccented vowel has been omitted is seen to underlie a Quenya word:
ráca "wolf" descending from primitive d'râk, stem
DARÁK. Primitive *darâk- with the first vowel intact
would have yielded Quenya **laraca instead. So in some cases at
least, the unaccented vowel must have disappeared in Common Eldarin at the
latest.
In the case of two-syllable stems with a final consonant, this consonant and
the final vowel may also change places when an ending is added: thus the stem
ÚLUG manifests as ulgu- in the word ulgundô
"monster".
Note that in actual words, j as the final consonant of a stem
invariably becomes i before a consonant, merging with the stem-vowel to
produce a diphthong in -i (as when the stem TUY - or TUJ -
yields the word tuimâ "a sprout, bud" - for *tujmâ). Similarly,
w becomes u before a consonant, as when TIW yields
tiukâ "thick, fat" (for *tiwkâ). If a two-syllable
stem loses its second vowel in a derivative form, and the middle consonant
is a semi-vowel that is thus brought into direct contact with the final consonant,
the semi-vowel may again merge with the preceding vowel to form a diphthong
(as when the stem LÁYAK manifests as laik-, for
*layk- or *lajk-, in the derivative laik-wâ "green"). Interestingly,
VT45 reveals that in this and many other cases, Tolkien in his original manuscript marked
vowels arising from semi-vowels with a special diacritic (a small bow under the letter). To some
extent, such vowels may still be regarded as consonants.
Sometimes, but not
always, j becomes i also before vowels, as when DAY (DAJ) yields
daiô "shade" - but contrast nâje "lament" from NAY (NAJ). In
the former case, the i is marked with the diacritic discussed above (see VT45:8),
evidently indicating that it may also be regarded as a semi-vowel. Hence there may not
be a significant "discrepancy" after all.
- Medial fortifications like M > MB, N > ND,
L > LD, e.g. rimbâ "frequent, numerous" from
RIM, kandâ "bold" from KAN, kuldâ "golden-red"
from KUL.
- Nasal infixion, e.g. tungâ "taut, tight" from TUG; cf.
also WJ:375, where Tolkien derives pendâ "sloping" from a stem
PED "slope, slant down".
- A-infixion, e.g. thausâ "foul, evil-smelling, putrid" from
THUS, taurâ "masterful, mighty" from TUR (cf.
also maikâ "sharp" from MIK, WJ:337, and
naukâ *"stunted" from NUKU, WJ:413).
- I-infixion; this occurs in a small group of desiderative formations.
For instance, the adjective meinâ "eager to go, desiring to start"
comes from a stem MEN "go" (VT39:11). (Apparently this word could also be
used as a verb "desire to go in some direction, make for it, have some end in view";
this is at least true for its Quenya descendant mína-.) Other examples
are found in Quenya: maita "hungry" from the stem MAT "eat", and
soica "thirsty" from SOK "gulp, quaff, drink" (primitive
*maitâ, *soikâ, my reconstructions). See VT39:11.
- Lengthening of stem-vowel, e.g. khîmâ "sticky, viscous"
from KHIM, râba "wild, untamed" from RAB,
dâla "flat" from DAL.
- Stem-vowel prefixed: askarâ "tearing, hastening" from
SKAR "tear, rend" (in effect, askarâ becomes a kind of
participle).
Nouns in -â display much the same variation; in
most cases, such nouns denote inanimate things. Some are derived by simple
suffixation, e.g. wedâ "bond" (WED) or golbâ
"branch" (GÓLOB). Some show nasal infixion: kwentâ
"tale" (from KWET "speak"), randâ "cycle, age"
(RAD), kwingâ "bow" (KWIG). We also note cases where
the stem-vowel is lengthened, such as râmâ "wing" from
RAM or kânâ "outcry, clamour" from KAN (see
PM:361-362 for the latter example). Doubling of the final consonant in the stem
is also found: rattâ, ratta "course, river-bed" from
RAT, gassâ "hole, gap" from GAS. The word
ankâ "jaw, row of teeth" is based on a rearranged form of
the stem NAK "bite"; Tolkien actually wrote "an-kâ" as if to
emphasize that the middle vowel was lost. Whether the final -â is
an independent ending or just the stem-vowel suffixed and lengthened is
difficult to say. The similar formation OKTÂ "war" from KOT
"strive, quarrel" clearly displays an independent ending -â, since
the stem-vowel is here O.
As noted above, there are many verbs showing final A, but then as part of the
longer endings -tâ or -jâ. The simple ending
-a, -â is very rare on verbs. We note olsa- "to
dream" from the stem ÓLOS. Long -â combined with
medial fortification M > MB occurs in tambâ "to knock"
(TAM); the final -â is marked as accented. So is the final
vowel of battâ "trample", with the "medial consonant [of
the stem BAT, *BATA] lengthened in frequentative formation".
In some verbal stems, the final -a is quite clearly just the
stem-vowel repeated, for instance stama- "bar, exclude" (UT:282)
or glada "laugh" (PM:359). They are therefore irrelevant here.
The Common Eldarin word rondô "vaulted roof" does not contain
the ending -dô; this is the stem RONO (not in Etym) with
medial fortification n > nd (VT39:9, cf. WJ:414). Indeed we
cannot be sure that words like lindô are not derived from
LIN by means of a similar fortification and the simpler ending
-ô (see below). The question does not have much practical
interest.
The ending -dô also appear in a nasal-infixed form -ndo
or -ndô. In the word ulgundô "monster, deformed and
hideous creature" from ÚLUG it does not seem to be
agental, but is simply used to form a noun. In the words kalrondô
"hero" (from KAL "shine") and lansrondo, lasrondo
"hearer, listener, eavesdropper" (from LAS2 "listen"),
the ending -ndo, -ndô seems to be suffixed to another
masculine ending, -rô/-ro (see below). Tolkien actually
wrote "lansro-ndo, lasro-ndo" to make this clear. See also
-ondô.
As the feminine counterpart of -dô we would expect
-dê, and this ending may be attested in asmalindê
"yellow bird, 'yellow hammer' " (SMAL). The ending
-(i)ndê that here occurs may be seen as a nasal-infixed
form of *-dê, paralleling -ndô from
-dô. (In Quenya, -ndë can apparently be used of an
inanimate as well as a female agent: cf. ulundë "flood" from
ULU "flow".)
Another group of nouns in -ê denote substances:
khjelesê "glass" (KHYEL(ES) ), kjelepê
"silver" (KYELEP), laurê "golden light"
(LÁWAR/GLÁWAR), mazgê "dough" (MASAG),
rossê "dew, spray" (Letters:282), slingê "cobweb"
(SLIG); srawê "flesh" (MR:350); we may even include
mizdê "fine rain" (MIZD).
A feminine ending -ê, -e is seen in the word
tawarê, taware "dryad, spirit of woods" (evidently fem.,
contrast masc. tawarô, tawaro) (TÁWAR).
Cf. also bessê "wife" (BES), though this may contain a
longer ending -sê, and the final vowel in the pronoun
sê, se "she" (stem S; also sî,
si).
A few nouns in -ê denote localities: ndorê "land"
(NDOR, WJ:413), taurê "great wood, forest" (TÁWAR);
we may also add et-kelê "spring, issue of water" already mentioned (KEL).
However, the ending -ê also occurs in many nouns that
seem to have nothing in common semantically. The ending -ê may be
used alone (as in spinê "larch" from SPIN,
tatharê "willow-tree" from TATHAR), but more often
it is combined with some other manipulation of the stem, such as nasal-infixion
(londê "narrow path" from LOD), lengthening of the
stem-vowel (rîgê "crown" from RIG), A-infixion
(laibê "ointment" from LIB2), medial
fortifications like M > MB or N > ND (rimbê "crowd, host"
from RIM, spindê "tress, braid of hair" from SPIN)
or doubling of the final consonant of the stem (lassê "leaf" from
LAS1, b'rittê "gravel" from
BIRÍT). Nîbe "front, face" shows short -e,
but the stem-vowel of NIB is lengthened. In some nouns, the ending
-ê, -e may be analyzed as being simply the stem-vowel
suffixed and sometimes lengthened, e.g. in eredê "seed",
kjelepê "silver", ndere "bridegroom" (ERÉD,
KYELEP, DER/NÊR). Adjectives like dene "thin and strong,
pliant, lithe" (WJ:412) or verbal stems like dele "walk, go,
proceed, travel" (WJ:360) should probably be analyzed in the same way; no
actual derivational ending is present. The same is the case with the noun
kwende "Quendë, Elf"; it is derived from the stem KWENE by medial
fortification N > ND, not by any distinct ending -e (WJ:360).
Some few denote substances: g-lisi "honey" (LIS) and
pori "flour, meal" (POR); khîthi "mist, fog" may
also be seen as a substance (KHIS/KHITH). In light of this, may
liñwi "fish" (LIW, note nasal-infixion) be "fish" as a
substance, as food, rather than "fish" as an animal? Only one word in -i
refers to a single, concrete, tangible object: phini "a single hair"
(PM:362 - this word is stated to be Common Eldarin rather than Primitive
Quendian). In several of the examples above, including phini, the
"ending" may also be the stem-vowel suffixed (but obviously not in ari,
dômi-, pori).
The -î of the word îdî "heart, desire, wish"
seems to be unconnected (an abstract ending, or just the stem-vowel suffixed,
or even a misreading for *îdê as the Quenya form
írë may suggest?) The stem ID is not defined.
In gwa-lassiê "collection of leaves, foliage" from
lassê "leaf", the ending -iê + the prefix gwa-
"together" is used to form a collective (Letters:282).
The verbal ending -jâ, -ja, -iâ is
attested in the words barjâ- "to protect" (BAR),
berja- "to dare" (BER), beujâ- "follow,
serve" (BEW), ramja- "fly, sail; wander" (RAM),
tjaliâ- "to play" (TYAL), uljâ "it is raining"
(ULU). In the Etymologies, the word barjâ has
a diacritic indicating that the ending -jâ (or its final vowel)
was accented (BAR). But we cannot conclude that this is always the case;
berja "to dare" is marked as accented on the first syllable.
(Adjectival -jâ is apparently not accented; cf.
banjâ "beautiful".)
There are only a few nouns in -jâ, -ja:
galjâ "bright light" (KAL), gilja "star"
(GIL), kegjâ "hedge" (UT:282), talrunja "sole of foot"
(TALAM, RUN). Tolkien struck out winjâ "evening"
(WIN/WIND). Wanjâ "Vanya" (Quenya pl. Vanyar, the
first clan of the Eldar) is really an adjective "fair, beautiful", as noted
above (WJ:380, 383). Tolkien also reconstructed the primitive form of
Vanya as banjâ (BAN; cf. pl. "Banyai" in
PM:402).
The adjective ndulla "dark, dusky, obscure" may not contain the
ending -la; it is apparently formed from the root NDUL by
"strengthening" the final consonant to double LL and adding the
adjectival ending -â. Indeed the form in PQ and CE must have been
*ndullâ with a long final vowel, for primitive ndulla would
have yielded Quenya **nul (null-), but the actual Quenya form is
nulla. Ndulla must be understood as being ancient Quenya (after
the shortening of the original long final vowels) rather than primitive
Elvish.
The ending -la combined with the adjectival suffix -â
produces -lâ, as in heklâ mentioned above. This
-lâ would seem to be the origin of the Quenya participial ending
-la, Sindarin -l.
The -rille of silimarille "Silmaril" may be a verbal noun
derived from RIL "glitter", so that rille means something like
*"radiance, brilliance".
The -le of nenle "brook" (NEN) may or may not be
connected; if it is, the word would mean "watering". But this -le may
also be a diminutive ending.
How does ramalê "pinion, great wing (of eagle)" fit in?
(RAM)
Some "implements" may even be body parts, such as nakma "jaw" from
NAK "bite", or labmâ "tongue" from LABA "lick"
(WJ:416).
However, not all words in -mâ denote implements. Often the
meaning of the ending -mâ is very general; it simply denotes an
object somehow connected with the state or action denoted by the stem.
Parmâ "book" comes from a stem PAR "compose, put together";
a parmâ is simply a "thing that is composed or put together".
Sometimes -mâ denotes an impersonal agent, as in
tuimâ "a sprout, bud" from TUY "spring, sprout" or
tjulmâ "mast" from TYUL "stand up" (but in SD:419, the
primitive form of Quenya tyulma is reconstructed as kjulumâ
instead). In some cases, -mâ is used simply to derive concrete
nouns, as in pathmâ "level space, sward" or sjalmâ
"shell, conch, horn of Ulmo" (stems PATH, SYAL not defined).
Similarly, skelmâ "skin, fell" comes from a stem SKEL that
is not clearly glossed; it may mean "strip, strip bare" (cf.
SKAL1). Quenya corma "ring" plainly represents a
primitive form *kormâ (not reconstructed by Tolkien); the stem
KOR means "round", so a *kormâ is simply a "round
thing".
Infrequently the ending -mâ may also denote a
substance, as in wilmâ "air, lower air" from the stem
WIL "fly, float in air", or sagmâ "poison" from SAG
(stem meaning not given; perhaps "bitter").
The ending -mâ also seems to occur in one adjective,
silimâ "shining white", "silver" (as adj.) (SIL). But this
is probably a longer adjectival ending -imâ; see above.
A number of other words are easily explained as abstract words that have
taken on a more concrete meaning, as such words often do: rakmê
"fathom" from RAK "stretch out, reach", tekmê
"letter, symbol" from TEK "make a mark", tinmê
"sparkle, glint" from TIN "to sparkle", tulukmê "support,
prop" from TULUK (stem not defined but having to do with being firm or
steadfast). Note that English "support" may have both an abstract and a
concrete meaning (the act of supporting vs. a tangible prop),
illustrating how abstracts and concretes are easily conflated. In one case, the
ending -mê seems to be confused with -mâ; both
telmâ and telmê (or telma, telme)
"hood, covering" are mentioned by Tolkien when he etymologizes Quenya
telmë "hood" (TEL/TELU). Once again, a full abstract
"covering" takes on a concrete meaning: a hood, that should more
properly be called a telmâ with the ending for implements.
In a few cases, the ending -mê/-me occurs in the
names of substances: khithme "fog" (KHIS/KHITH),
silimê "light of Silpion", also a poetic word for "silver"
(SIL; this may actually be a nominalized form of the apparently
adjectival ending seen in silimâ; see -imâ). In one
word -mê simply denotes something intangible: do3mê
"night" (DO3, see DOMO).
Sometimes the ending -nâ (-na) produces forms that
may be considered past participles, as when DUL "hide, conceal" yields
ndulna "secret" (or *"hidden, concealed"). Gjernâ "old,
worn" may be seen as a past participle if the stem GYER means "to wear
(out)", like a Quenya verbal derivative of this stem (yerya) does. Likewise,
skelnâ "naked" comes from a stem (SKEL) that may mean
"strip bare" (cf. SKAL1 ). Clearly participial are the forms
skalnâ "veiled, hidden, shadowed, shady" from SKAL1
"screen, hide (from light)", skarnâ "wounded" from
SKAR "tear, rend", and barnâ "safe, protected,
secure" from BAR "uplift, save, rescue". We also note wannâ
"departed, dead" from WAN "depart, go away, disappear, vanish" and
khalnâ "noble, exalted" from KHAL2 "uplift".
Lebnâ "left behind" would seem to be a past participle from its
gloss, but surprisingly the stem LEB/LEM does not mean "leave behind";
it is glossed "stay, stick, adhere, remain, tarry".
In a few cases, words in -nâ are used as nouns rather
than adjectives, like staknâ "cleft, split". This would be a past
participle used as a noun; the stem STAK is glossed "split, insert".
There is also the original form of Lindon, Lindânâ; the name
refers to the Lindarin (Telerin) Green-elves that settled there
(WJ:385). Lindânâ would mean simply "Lindarin
[Area]". The word ramna "wing (horn), extended point at side, etc."
doesn't quite fit in; it is derived from a stem already meaning "wing" and must
be seen simply as a variant (RAM).
A longer form -inâ, -ina is found in a few words:
smalinâ "yellow" (SMAL), Bedûina
("Bedû-ina") "of the Spouses" (Bedû, Aulë and
Yavanna; see LEP/LEPEN/LEPEK), ngolwina "wise, learned in deep
arts" (ÑGOL). In the case of ngolwina, the ending is not
added directly to the stem ÑGOL, but to *ngolwê (my
reconstruction), the origin of Quenya nolwë "wisdom, secret lore".
In some words -ô, -o has no agental meaning, but is
simply a masculine ending: urkô ?"Orc" (WJ:390),
ndêro "bridegroom" (NDER, strengthened form of DER
"man"), wegô "man" (WEG "manly vigour"),
berô "valiant man, warrior" (BER "valiant";
under BES berô is simply glossed "man"),
tawarô/tawaro "dryad, spirit of woods" (evidently masc.;
fem. tawarê/taware) (TÁWAR "wood, forest").
We also note iondo "son" (mentioned under SEL-D; read
*jondo?), clearly derived from YON with medial fortification
n > nd and the masculine ending -o.
The ending -ô also occurs in the names of some animals:
rokkô "horse" (Letters:282, 382, stem ROK given in
the Etymologies) and morokô "bear"
(MORÓK); we may include ûbanô "monster"
(BAN). Whether we should insist that such words are exclusively
masculine we cannot know. Since -ô corresponds to feminine
-ê, a she-bear may explicitly be a *morokê,
while a mare is a *rokkê. Similarly, an *urkê would
be a female Orc (never seen, never mentioned and never heard of, but according
to Silm. ch. 3 "the Orcs had life and multiplied after the manner of the
Children of Ilúvatar", so Orc-women must have existed!) But words like
morokô, rokkô and
ûbanô can probably be used with generic reference,
irrespective of sex.
Only rarely is -o, -ô used to derive words
denoting inanimate things with no agental meaning. We note daio "shade,
shadow cast by any object" (DAY "shadow"), panô "plank,
fixed board, especially in a floor" (PAN "place, set, fix in
place (especially of wood)"), tinkô "metal" (TINKÔ is
the head of an entry in the Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete
word and not just a "stem"). Abstracts in -ô are very rare indeed;
we note mbandô "custody, safe-keeping" (MR:350) and
alâkô "rush, rushing flight, wild wind
(ÁLAK; "wild wind" is at least relatively concrete). In the words
lokko "ringlet" (LOKH), ndôro "land or region"
(WJ:413), rondô "a vaulted or arched roof" (WJ:414),
ostô (CE) "fortress, stronghold" and tollo "island"
(TOL2), the final vowel is probably just the stem-vowel
suffixed. This is also the case in verbal stems like groto "dig,
excavate, tunnel", rono "arch over, roof in" or soto "shelter,
protect, defend" (WJ:414).
Is the ending -re in balâre, the archaic form of
the name of the island Balar at Sirion's mouth (BAL), somehow
connected to any of these -rê's?
Tolkien notes in WJ:371 that while the short form -ro is used after a
suffixed stem-vowel (ómataina), as in abaro, the long form
-rô may be added directly to the stem "with or without
n-infixion". But the only nasal-infixed word with this ending that
occurs in the Etymologies, kwentro "narrator" from KWET
"speak", shows the short form -ro. (Perhaps we should indeed read
*kwentrô since the Quenya descendant quentaro shows
-o, while an original short final -o would have been lost
at the Common Eldarin stage.) We may also throw in lansrondo from
LAS2; this -rondo seems to be -ro + another masculine
ending (also in kalrondô "hero"; see -ndô under
-dô, and -ondô).
In a few words, -rô, -ro functions simply as a masculine
ending and has no agental significance. Cf. târo "king" from
TÂ/TA3 "high, lofty, noble". Kalrô "noble man, hero"
is a doubtful case, but perhaps it means literally "shining one" (KAL
"shine").
The masculine ending -rô apparently has a feminine counterpart
-rê, as in weirê "weaver" (WEY).
There are only a few nouns in -tâ, -ta. We
note sjadta "axe-stroke" (SYAD), bestâ "matrimony"
(BES), smalta "gold" (LÁWAR/GLÁWAR cf.
SMAL) and jakta- "neck" (YAK).
The adjective arâtâ "exalted" does not contain the
ending -tâ, but is an adjective derived from the extended stem
arat- (PM:363). The Common Eldarin noun
ñalatâ "radiance, glittering reflection" may similarly be
an extended form of the stem ÑAL (PM:347, not in the
Etymologies). Kalata- ?"shine" is stated to be an expanded form
of kala- (WJ:392). The element kwata seen in Eldarin words for
"full" also goes back on a simpler stem KWA (WJ:412).
In one case -wâ turns up in a word stated to be an "adverb and
preposition": hekwâ "leaving aside, not counting, excluding,
except" (WJ:365). This is simply an elaboration of an "adverbial element"
HEKE, meaning "aside, apart, separate" (WJ:361).
The ending -wâ also occurs in a couple of bird-names,
alkwâ "swan" (ÁLAK) and kukûwâ
"dove" (KÛ). Perhaps these are originally adjectives that were
applied to these birds; alkwâ would seem to mean *"rushing", while
kukûwa is obscure (echoic?)
In one case, the ending -wâ is given as part of the head of an
entry in the Etymologies. The entry GENG-WÂ, whence Quenya
engwa "sickly", is evidently to be understood as a stem GENG with
this ending.
In the case of the word uñgwê "gloom", the ending
-wê seems simply to denote something intangible
(UÑG). We need not consider Wolwê, the tentative
reconstruction of the earlier form of Olwë; Tolkien points out that
this reconstruction is doubtful (PM:357).
PRIMITIVE ELVISH WORDLIST
The spelling of y/j is regularized to j; as noted above,
Christopher Tolkien altered his father's original spelling in the Etymologies
when editing the material, changing j to y (LR:346). We restore
Tolkien's original spelling in the Etymologies material, thus bringing
it into accord with the spelling of the primitive words listed in the essay
Quendi and Eldar (WJ:359-424), the other main source concerning the
oldest stages of Elvish. We also regularize other words from sources where it
seems that Tolkien really did use y rather than j, such as
Letters.
In the sources, long vowels are marked with macrons; in this list,
circumflexes are used instead. In Tolkien's spelling, accents in the primitive
words indicate stress (not long vowels as in the spelling of Quenya).
Hence, álâkô "rush" is accented on the first
syllable, while the two following vowels are long. The accent mark is rare;
normally, Tolkien does not mark the accented syllable. However, he sometimes
marks a vowel with both a macron and an accent to indicate that the
vowel is both long and accented. This combination cannot be reproduced here, so
we do as we did above and dispose of the accent marks altogether, marking the
stressed vowels by means of italics instead (e.g.
alâkô, banjâ,
barasâ).
A (very rare) diacritic indicating that a vowel is short is here omitted, since the
absence of the circumflex means the same. Tolkien sometimes uses a diacritic
indicating that a vowel may have been either short or long; in such cases we
here give a double form, e.g. rattâ/ratta (where Tolkien
marked the final -a with the diacritic in question to indicate that it
was either long -â or short -a; see the Etymologies,
entry RAT).
It should be noted that in some cases, Tolkien (or possibly the transcriber)
seems to have failed to indicate that a final vowel is long. For instance,
ndulla "dark, dusky, obscure" (NDUL) must have been
*ndullâ at the most primitive stage, or it would have yielded
Quenya **nul instead of the actual form nulla. Similarly, there
is little reason to doubt that lakra "swift" (LAK) should have
been *lakrâ, since the adjectival ending -râ is
attested in a number of other words (and since Quenya larca has not lost
the vowel, only shortened it, while original short final -a was
lost in Common Eldarin). Note inconsistencies like laikwâ
(laik-wâ) also appearing in the form laikwa (LAYAK
vs. LAIK). It should be remembered that the Etymologies is
actually a quite chaotic document of rough working notes, not a carefully made
manuscript that Tolkien ever intended to publish in this form. Therefore, there
is no need to construct overwrought theories to explain certain apparent
irregularities. We may choose to see words like ndulla as later forms,
archaic Quenya, after the shortening of the original long final vowels.
The asterisked form *mad-lî ("honey-eater" = bear) listed under
LIS is not included in this wordlist, for as the lenitions give away,
this is archaic Sindarin and not a primitive form. The asterisked form
*Goss "Ossë" that is mentioned under GOS/GOTH is also
excluded; this is not an archaic form, but the hypothetical, unused "Noldorin"
cognate of Quenya Ossë ("Noldorin" used Oeros instead). The
primitive form yielding Quenya Ossë and "Noldorin" *Goss would be *Gossê, not mentioned by Tolkien.
Words that were struck out in the Etymologies are bracketed; if the
stem itself was struck out, the entire entry is bracketed.
â imperative particle, independent and variable in place
(WJ:365, 371). Cf. heke-â.
-â adjectival ending (WJ:382)
abaro (PQ) "recusant, one who refuses to act as advised or
commanded" > CE abar pl. abarî "refuser, one who
declined to follow Oromë" > Quenya Avar, Avari
(WJ:371, 361, 380, 411) The Etymologies has
abârô/abâro "refuser, one who
does not go forth" (AB/ABAR)
adnô "gate" (AD)
ailin ("ai-lin") "pool, lake" (AY)
aiwê "(small) bird" (AIWÊ is the head of an entry
in the Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
ajan- "holy" (AYAN; according to VT45:6 Tolkien actually wrote "aian-", but with a
diacritical mark indicating that the i is here a semi-vowel)
akâra "made, did", a primitive past tense of KAR, marked as
a past tense by the augment, the reduplicated stem-vowel (WJ:415)
aklara "glory, splendour" (VT47:13)
akrâ "narrow" (AK)
akwâ "fully, completely, altogether, wholly" (if = Quenya
aqua, the word it yielded) (WJ:392, said to be an "extension or
intensification of *kwâ, used adverbially", WJ:415)
al- (prefix) "no, not" (AR2)
alâkô "rush, rushing flight, wild wind"
(ÁLAK)
[alar-si, alâri "hail!, bliss" (forms deleted by Tolkien)
(VT45:26)]
alkwâ "swan" (ÁLAK, where the spelling is "alk-wâ", but in VT42:7,
the form is cited without a hyphen)
ankâ ("an-kâ") "jaw, row of teeth"
(NAK)
anâr- "sun" (ANÁR; be polite and don't ask how
Primitive Elvish could have a word for "sun")
andâ "long" (ÁNAD/ANDA);
andambundâ "long-snouted" = elephant (MBUD)
angâ (CE) "iron" (PM:347, cf. also ANGÂ in
the Etymologies; though this is the head of an entry, it seems to be a
complete word and not just a "stem")
angwa or angu "snake" (the forms ANGWA/ANGU are found
in the head of an entry in the Etymologies, but they seem to be complete
words and not just "stems")
aññol- "stench" (VT46:6)
anta- "to present, give" (ANA1)
ap-pata "walk behind", on a track or path (PM:387)
ap'lata "prohibition, refusal" (VT47:13)
ara- "noble", extended stem arat-;
arâtâ "exalted" (PM:363)
Arâmê (not capitalized in source) evidently the
oldest Elvish form (adopted from Valarin) of the name that became
Oromë in Quenya and Araw in Sindarin (WJ:400, where
various intermediate archaic forms are also mentioned)
ari "day" (AR1)
askarâ "tearing, hastening" (SKAR)
asmalê "yellow bird, 'yellow hammer' " (SMAL)
asmalindê, asmalinde "yellow bird, 'yellow hammer' " (SMAL, VT46:14)
atar (PQ) "father" (ATA)
atata, cardinal "two", also (a)tata (VT42:27)
at-jên-ar "anniversary day" (YEN)
atû (PQ) "father" (ATA)
atakwê "construction, building" (TAK)
au- (CE) "away", from the point of view of the thing, person, or
place left (WJ:361)
aud possible origin of the Sindarin preposition o "from, of"; sc.
au with the suffix -d(a) (WJ:366)
awâ = au, as an independent adverbial form, apparently
also as prefix, as an intensive form of awa-, au- (WJ:361).
Cf. wâ-
awa-delo, awâ-delo (also ?wâ-delô)
(CE) *"Away-goer", a name made in Beleriand for those who finally
departed from Middle-earth (WJ:360)
awâwiiê *"has passed away" (WJ:366), evidently the
perfect of wâ-. Later *a-wâniiê, "with
intrusion of n from the past"
aw'tha "a dim shape, spectral or vague apparition" (VT42:9)
bâ "No! Don't!" (WJ:372)
bad- "judge" (prob. verb); bâd- "judgement" (BAD)
bal'tar- *"Vala-king" = Vala (BAL)
balâ, pl. balî ("bal-î"; according to VT45:7,
Tolkien indicated that the second syllable receives the stress)
"Power, God" (BAL)
balâre archaic form of the name Balar, referring to
a large island at Sirion's mouth (BAL)
balî-ndôre/balî-ndore "Valinor"
(BAL; see VT45:7 concerning the stress. WJ:413 also gives Valinôrê, but this form must be
late, after the Quenya change of initial b > v.)
Banâ (not capitalized in source)
"Vána", name of a Valië (spelt Vana in the Etymologies)
(BAN; however, Vána's name is derived from a stem WAN in
WJ:383)
banjâ "beautiful" (BAN), also "Vanya-elf";
pl. Banyai "Vanyar" in PM:402 may be taken as ancient Quenya (primitive
*banjâi). See also wanjâ.
baradâ "lofty, sublime" (BARÁD,
BARATH; in Etym as printed in LR the second syllable is marked as stressed, but this is wrong according
to VT45:7)
barasâ "hot, burning" (BARÁS)
barjâ- > Quenya varya "to protect"
(BAR)
Barathî "Varda", spouse of Manwe, Queen of Stars
(BARATH)
barnâ > Quenya varna "safe, protected, secure"
(BAR)
bâta ("bâ-ta") "ban, prohibit"
(WJ:372)
batâ/bata "beaten track, pathway"
(BAT)
battâ "trample" (BAT)
Bedûina ("Bedû-ina") "of the Spouses" (Aule
and Yavanna) (LEP/LEPEN/LEPEK)
belê "strength" (BEL)
belek (unglossed, the source of:)
belekâ "mighty, huge, great" (BEL)
berekâ "wild" (BERÉK)
berja- "to dare" (BER)
bernô "man" (BES)
berô "valiant man, warrior" (BER), "man"
(BES)
besnô "husband" (BES (BER) )
bessê "wife" (BES)
bestâ "matrimony" (BES)
besû "husband and wife, married pair" (BES,
LEP/LEPEN/LEPEK)
beujâ- "follow, serve" (BEW; according to VT45:7, the last vowel is marked
as stressed in Tolkien's manuscript)
beurô "follower, vassal" (BEW)
boron- "steadfast, trusty man, faithful vassal"
(BOR)
[b'radil-] "Varda" (BARÁD)
b'randâ "lofty, noble, fine" (BARÁD)
b'ras-sê "heat" (BARÁS)
b'rekta- "break out suddenly" (BERÉK)
b'rethâ "beech-mast" (BERÉTH)
b'rittê "broken stones, gravel" (BIRÍT)
b'rônâ "that has long endured, old" (of things only; implies
that they are old, but not changed or worn out) (BORÓN)
daiâ, variant of daiô, q.v. (VT45:8)
daiô "shade, shadow cast by any object" (DAY; according to VT45:6, the second
syllable is marked as long in Tolkien's manuscript)
daira "large, great" (VT42:11)
dâla "flat" (DAL)
dan- = ndan-, q.v.
dattâ "hole, pit" (DAT/DANT)
de pronominal element in the 2nd person; also le
(WJ:363)
dele (also with suffix del-ja) "walk, go, proceed, travel"
(WJ:360)
dene "thin and strong, pliant, lithe" (WJ:412)
Denwego (must for historical reasons be CE) "Lenwë",
the leader of the Nandor. The name is interpreted "lithe-and-active", evidently
dene + wego (WJ:412)
dêr, der- (PQ) "man" (NI1,
NÊR)
dess "young woman" (BES)
dî "bride" (?) (BES)
dimbâ "sad, gloomy" (DEM)
dimbê "gloom, sadness" (DEM)
dîs "bride" (?) (BES)
do3mê "night" (?) (DOMO)
dômi- "twilight" (DOMO, SD:302), cf. dômilindê "nightingale" (SD:302)
d'râk "wolf" (DARÁK)
dulla, dulna apparently variants of ndulna, q.v. (VT45:11)
edela "eldest" (also "firstborn", struck out)
(ÉLED)
edelô (PQ) "one who goes, traveller, migrant" (from
dele). A name made at the time of the Separation for those who decided
to follow Oromë. (WJ:360)
edlô possible variant form of edelô, "with
loss of sundóma" (stem-vowel) (WJ:363, 364)
[Eigolosse "Ever-snow", name of Taniquetil (EY)]
[ejâ "ever" (EY)]
eke (PQ) "sharp point" (WJ:365)
ek-tâ "prick with a sharp point", "stab", and (by blending
with hek-ta) "treat with scorn, insult", often with reference to
rejection or dismissal (WJ:365)
ektele "spring, issue of water" (metathesized tk > kt; oldest form
et-kelê) (KEL)
ekwê *"said" (WJ:392), a primitive past tense marked by the
"augment" or reduplicated base-vowel (WJ:415)
el, ele, el-â (CE) "lo! look! see!", derived
from PQ ELE (WJ:360)
êl pl. eli, êli "star", also
elen pl. elenî with "extended base" (WJ:360)
eldâ (CE) an adjectival formation "connected or
concerned with the stars", used as a description of the kwendî,
the origin of Quenya Elda. (WJ:360) This obsoletes the (slightly)
earlier reconstruction in Letters:281: Eledâ "an Elf" (cf.
Eled- "Starfolk" = Elves under EL in the Etymologies)
Eled-nil "Ælfwine" (Elf-friend, Quenya Elendil)
(NIL/NDIL)
[eleda] "firstborn" (ÉLED)
Eledandore *"Elf-land" (ÉLED)
Eleðser (masc. name = Old English Ælfwine,
Elf-friend) (SER; the change d > ð seems to indicate that this form
is later than Primitive Quendian or Common Eldarin.)
elen pl. elenî "star" (Letters:281, said to be
"primitive Elvish"; cf. WJ:360 [see êl])
elenâ (CE) = eldâ (WJ:360). Cf.
Letters:281: elenâ "Elf"
Endero (archaic or alternative Quenya form?) a surname of Tulkas
(NDER)
eredê "seed" (ERÉD)
ereqa "isolated" (ERE; this seems to be an unorthodox spelling
for *erekwa, unless Tolkien wanted to denote that original [kw] had
merged into a single labio-velar sound - or this may be an indication that what is normally
spelt "kw" was a single labio-velar sound all along, that could fittingly be written as one letter, "q". But cf. erikwa below.)
erikwa "single, alone" (VT42:10)
erjâ "isolated, lonely" (VT42:4)
esdê > ezdê (CE) "Repose", origin of
the Quenya name of the Valië Estë, Telerin Êde
(WJ:403)
et-kat "fashion" (KAT)
et-kelê "spring, issue of water" (KEL)
et-kuiwê "awakening" (KUY)
etlâ-ndorê, etla-ndore, ancestral form of the name Eglador (VT42:4)
etsiri "mouth of a river" (ET)
ezdê see esdê
gairâ "awful, fearful" (WJ:400)
gais- "to dread" (GÁYAS)
gaisrâ "dreadful" (GÁYAS)
gaj- "astound, make aghast" (WJ:400)
gâjâ "terror, great fear" (PM:363)
gajakâ "fell, terrible, dire" (PM:363)
Gajar- (CE) "the Terrifier", the name first made for the
vast Sea (> Quenya Eär) (PM:363; gayâr,
WJ:400)
galadâ "great growth", "tree"; applied to stout and
spreading trees such as oaks and beeches; contrast ornê.
(UT:266, SD:302, Letters:426; in the latter source, the root GAL is defined
"grow", intransitive)
galjâ "bright light" (KAL)
[gâlæ- "light"] (KAL)
gardâ "bounded or defined place, region" (WJ:402)
gâsa "void" (?) (GAS)
gassâ "hole, gap" (GAS)
gattâ "cavern" (GAT(H) )
[geiâ "ever" (GEY)]
[Geigolosse "Everlasting Snow" = Taniquetil (GEY)]
gilja "star" (GIL)
gjernâ "old, worn, (of things:) decripit" (GYER)
g'lâ "radiance" (KAL; see VT45:18 concerning the stress)
glada ("g-lada") (CE) "laugh" (PM:359)
glindâ alternative (late PQ) form of lindâ
(PM:380, 411)
glisi ("g-lisi") "honey" (LIS). (There can be little doubt that g-lisi is meant to be the ancestral form of "Noldorin"/Sindarin glî "honey", the form mentioned just before it, though g-lisi is not asterisked.)
golbâ "branch" (GÓLOB)
gon(o), gond(o) "stone, rock"
(Letters:410, PM:374)
gor-ngoroth "deadly fear" (ÑGOROTH)
Gothombauk- (personal name > Sindarin Gothmog)
(MBAW)
grauk- "a powerful, hostile, and terrible creature", origin of
the second element in Quenya Valarauco, Sindarin Balrog
(WJ:415)
grotâ (also rotâ) (CE) "excavation,
underground dwelling"; -grota in the compound nâba-grota
(WJ:414). Intensified form grottâ "a large excavation"
(WJ:415)
groto "dig, excavate, tunnel" (WJ:414); cf. rot-.
gû "not, un-, in-" (UGU/UMU), prefix
gû- (prefix) "no, not" (GÛ)
guldâ "red" (GUL)
guruk- see ruk-
gwa-lassa, gwa-lassiê "collection of leaves,
foliage" (Letters:282)
heke (PQ) "apart, not including" (WJ:361);
imperative heke-â "be off!" (WJ:365)
hekla (PQ) "any thing (or person) put aside from, or left
out from, its normal company"; personal form heklô "waif or
outcast"; adjectival heklâ and hekelâ
(WJ:361), extended adjectival form heklanâ (CE)
"Forsaken", the name given by the Sindar to themselves after they were left
behind in Beleriand (WJ:365).
hek-tâ (PQ, CE) "set aside, cast out, forsake"
(WJ:361; hek-ta, WJ: 365)
hek-wâ adverb and preposition "leaving aside, not counting,
excluding, except" (WJ:365)
hjôlâ "trump" (SD:419)
hô, ho adverb "from, coming from", the point of view
being outside the thing referred to (WJ:361); -hô an
enclitic that is the origin of the Quenya genitive ending -o
(WJ:368)
-î a plural ending, see for instance elen pl.
elenî
îdê "heart, desire, wish" (ID, VT45:17; the latter source indicates that
the final vowel is properly ê rather than î as in Etym as printed in LR)
idrê "thoughtfulness" (ID)
-ikwâ an abjectival ending meaning roughly "-ful"
(WJ:412). Also -kwâ.
indise ("i-ndise") intensive form of ndîse
> Quenya Indis (NDIS-SÊ/SÂ)
Indo-glaurê (may be primitive Lindarin) (masc.
name) (ID)
Indo-klâr (may be primitive Lindarin)
(ID)
iondo "son" (SEL-D; read *jondo?)
istâjâ "learned" (VT45:18)
-ittâ a feminine ending (PM:345)
-ja, adjectival ending (VT42:10)
jagâ "void, abyss" (Letters:383)
jagu "gulf" (YAG)
jagwê "ravine, cleft, gulf" (YAG)
jakta- "neck" (YAK)
jantâ "yoke" (YAT)
jatmâ > Quenya yanwe "bridge, joining, isthmus"
(YAT)
jên, jend- "daughter" (YÔ/YON)
jô, jôm "together", of more than two; as prefix
jo-, jom- (WJ:361)
julmâ "drinking-vessel" (WJ:416)
julmê "drinking, carousal" (WJ:416)
kala-kwendî "Calaquendi, Light-folk", the Elves that had
experienced the Light of Aman (WJ:373)
kalarjâ "brilliant" (KAL)
kala ?"shine", expanded stem kalata- (WJ:392)
kalrô "noble man, hero" (KAL)
kalrondô "hero" (KAL)
kanata, kanatâ, cardinal "four" (VT42:24)
kandâ "bold" (KAN)
kânô "crier, herald"; original form of the ending in Fingon,
Turgon (PM:362, 352)
karani "red" (KARÁN). According to VT45:19, the word was originally
written as karâni.
kassa, kasma ("kas-ma, kas-sa") "helmet"
(KAS)
katwâ "shaped, formed" (KAT)
katwârâ "shapely" (KAT)
k(a)wâk "crow" (WJ:395)
keg- "snag, barb"; keglê > Sindarin cail,
a fence or palisade of spikes and sharp stakes; kegjâ "hedge"
(UT:282)
kelun ("kelu-n") "river" (KEL)
khagda "pile, mound" (KHAG)
khaimê "habit" (KHIM)
khalatirnô/khalatirno (PQ) "kingsfisher",
etymologically "fish-watcher" (TIR)
khalnâ "noble, exalted" (KHAL2)
khaustâ "resting" (khau-stâ = "rest-ing")
(KHAW)
kher- "possess"; noun khêr, kherû
"master" (Letters:178, 282)
khîmâ "sticky, viscous" (KHIM)
khînâ "child", in compounds khîna,
khinâ (WJ:403)
khît(h)i "mist, fog" (KHIS/KHITH, VT45:22)
khithme "fog" (KHIS/KHITH)
khithwa "grey" (KHIS/KHITH)
khjelesê "glass" (KHYEL(ES) )
Khô-gorê (masc.name "heart-vigour" > Quenya
Huore, Sindarin Huor) (KHÔ-N; Khôgore,
GOR)
khotsê "assembly" (KHOTH)
khrassê "precipice" (KHARÁS)
khugan "hound" (KHUG, see KHUGAN)
kirtê "cutting" (WJ:396)
kjelepê ("kyelepê") "silver" (Letters:426; cf.
UT:266)
kjulumâ "mast" (SD:419; this may obsolete the earlier
reconstruction tjulmâ, q.v.)
k'lâ "light" (KAL; see VT45:18 concerning the stress)
kogna (from even older ku3nâ) "bowed,
bow-shaped, bent" (KU3)
koro (primitive Quenya?) "Kôr" (KOR, VT45:23)
kot-t- "quarrel" (KOT > KOTH)
k'rannâ "ruddy (of face)" (KARÁN)
k'riktâ "reap" (KIRIK)
krumbâ "left" (> Sindarin crom),
krumbê "the left hand" (> Sindarin crum)
(KURÚM)
ku3nâ "bowed, bow-shaped, bent" (KU3)
kukûwâ "dove" (KÛ)
kuldâ (1) "hollow" (WJ:414), (2) "red"
(KUL)
kundû "prince" (KUNDÛ is the head of an entry in
the Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
kûua (CE for PQ *kukûwâ?) "dove"
(KÛ)
kuw (from kû3) "bow" (KU3)
kwa, kwa-ta element seen in Eldarin words for "full"
(WJ:412); *kwâ the base of the "intensified" form
akwâ, q.v.; -kwâ adjectival ending "-ful"
(WJ:392). Also, it seems, -ikwâ.
kwâra "fist" (PM:318)
kwelett- "corpse" (KWEL)
kwene (PQ) "person" (m. or f.) > CE
kwên (in compounds -kwen), pl. kweni, "person",
"one", "(some)body"; pl. "persons", "(some) people" (WJ:360, 392).
In WJ:416, kwene is translated "user of articulate speech",
the most basic etymology.
kwende (PQ and CE), pl. kwendî (WJ:360, 409;
"kwendi" in WJ:393 would seem to be an error) "Quendi, Elves", probably
first used in the plural for all the first Elves: "people, the people of the
Elves". (WJ:360; this obsoletes the earlier reconstruction kwenedê
in the Etymologies, stem KWEN(ED).)
kwendjâ adj. "belonging to the *kwendî, to the people
as a whole" (WJ:360, 393)
kwentâ "tale" (KWET)
kwentro "narrator" (KWET)
kwessê "feather" (KWES)
kwetta "word" (KWET)
kwingâ "bow" (for shooting) (KWIG)
la- (prefix) "no, *un-" (> Quenya il- via
vocalic l) (LA)
labmâ earliest form of the word that became
lambâ (q.v.) in Common Eldarin "and possibly earlier", sc. in
Primitive Quendian (WJ:416).
labmê earliest form of the word that became
lambê (q.v.) in Common Eldarin "and possibly earlier", sc. in
Primitive Quendian (WJ:416).
lâda "flat" (DAL)
laibê > Quenya laive "ointment", Sindarin glaew
"salve" (LIB2)
laikwâ (laik-wâ) "green" (LÁYAK;
laikwa under LAIK is evidently a later form, after the shortening
of the final vowels. Letters:282 gives what must be a variant form:
laikâ.)
lakra "swift, rapid" (LAK2)
lambâ "tongue" (the physical tongue, not = language)
(WJ:394). From labmâ (WJ:416).
lambê "tongue-movement, (way of) using the tongue", in
non-technical use the normal word for "language" (WJ:394; VT42:17 cites "lambe-" as a Common
Eldarin word for language). From labmê (WJ:416).
lansrondo, lasrondo ("lansro-ndo, lasro-ndo")
"hearer, listener, eavesdropper" (LAS2)
lassê "leaf" or "ear" (LAS1,
Letters:282)
lassekwelêne "autumn" (lit. *"leaf-fading")
(LAS1)
lasû "ears" (a dual form = two ears of one person)
(LAS2)
lauka "warm" (LAW)
laurê "light of the golden Tree Laurelin, gold" (but
not properly used of the metal) (LÁWAR/GLÁWAR)
lawa "year" (VT42:10)
le pronominal element in the 2nd person; also de
(WJ:363)
lebnâ "left behind" (LEB/LEM)
lepem (CE) "fingers"; the word incorporates the C.E. plural indicator -m. (VT42:26)
lepen, cardinal "five", in Common Eldarin also lepene "with a final vowel modelled on
the other numerals" (VT42:24), later (after syncope) lepne as the form immediately preceding Quenya lempë (VT42:25)
lepenja, ordinal "fifth" (VT42:26)
leth- "set free" (LEK)
libda "soap" (LIB2)
ligâ "fine thread, spider filament" (SLIG)
lindâ (1) "Linda" (Quenya pl. Lindar), what the Teleri
called themselves (PM:380). Primitive pl. Lindâi
(WJ:378) or Lindai (WJ:385)
lindâ (2) "sweet-sounding" (SLIN)
Lindân-d "musical land" (> Lindon) name of
Ossiriand because of water and birds (LIN2). However, Tolkien
later reconstructed the primitive form of the name Lindon as
Lindânâ and explained the name as referring to the
Lindarin (Telerin) Green-elves that settled there
(WJ:385).
linkwi "wet"(LINKWI is the head of an entry in the
Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
liñwi "fish" (LIW)
loga = sloga (?) (VT42:10)
logna "soaking wet, swamped" (VT42:10)
lo3o "night" (VT45:28)
lokko "ringlet" (LOKH)
londê "narrow path, strait, pass" (LOD)
lugni "blue" (LUG2)
lotta-, apparently a verb "to bloom", the source of Quenya losta- of similar meaning, and also
influencing Sindarin loth "flower" (VT42:18)
luktiênê "enchantress" > Luthien,
Lhúthien, Lúthien (LUK)
lungâ "heavy" (LUG1)
-m a plural ending (3O), in VT42:26 said to be an ancient Common Eldarin plural
indicator. See lepem.
-mâ suffix frequent in the names of implements
(WJ:416); see julmâ, sukmâ,
takmâ
mâgâ "soil, stain" (SMAG)
magit- (CE) "shapely" (PM:366)
magla "stain", "stained" (though asterisked in Etym, this may be Old
Sindarin, since the S of the stem SMAG has been lost - primitive
*smagla?)
magnâ "skilled" (MAG, under MA3)
magrâ "useful, fit, good (of things)" (MAG, under
MA3)
maha "hand" (VT39:11); cf. PQ mâ3 (ma3-) in
the Etymologies (MA3)
ma3tâ ("ma3-tâ") "to handle" (evidently PQ,
since it yielded CE mahtâ-) (MA3, also mentioned in the entry MAK)
ma3iti "handy, skilled" (MA3)
mahtâ- ("Eld" = CE) "to handle" (from PQ
ma3tâ; see VT45:30 concerning the stress of the CE word) (MA3)
maikâ "sharp, penetrating, going deep in" (called a
"strong adjective", whatever that means). (WJ:337)
Mailikô, Mailikâ "Greedy One", Melkor
(MIL-IK)
makla "sword" (MAK)
maktâ "wield a weapon" (MAK)
mâlô "friend" (MEL)
mâmâ "sheep" (WJ:395)
mapâ "hand" (MAP)
mâtâ "is eating", continuous form of the stem mata-
"eat" (VT39:13)
mauj- "need" (impersonal) (MBAW)
mazgâ "pliant, soft" (MASAG)
mazgê "dough" (MASAG)
mbakhâ "article (for exchange), ware, thing"
(MBAKH)
mbanda "duress, prison" (MBAD)
mbandô "custody, safe-keeping" (MR:350)
mbartanô "world-artificer", title of Aulë
(LT1:266)
mbelekôro (said to be the "oldest Q[uenya] form" of Melkor,
but evidently far more primitive than the Quenya of historical times)
(WJ:402)
mbundu "snout, nose, cape" (MBUD)
-mê abstract or verbal noun ending, as in
julmê "drinking, carousal", from the stem JULU "drink"
(WJ:416)
meinâ "desiring to start, eager to go" (VT39:11)
metta "end" (MET)
mikrâ "sharp-pointed" (WJ:337)
miniia "single, distinct, unique" (MINI)
minitaun "tower" (MINI (and TUN) ); minitunda
"isolated hill" (TUN)
mi-srawanwe "incarnate" (cf. srawâ) (MR:350)
mizdâ "wet" (MIZD)
mizdê "fine rain" (MIZD)
môl- "slave, thrall" (MÔ)
mori "black", "dark(ness)" (MOR, Letters:382, WJ:362; the latter
source discusses the possibility of a later form mora- in very early
Sindarin); Mori-kwendî "Moriquendi, Dark-folk" = Avari, as
opposed to Kala-kwendî (WJ:373)
mornâ "dark" (Letters:382)
morokô "bear" (MORÓK)
nâbâ (CE) "hollow"; nâba-grota "hollow
underground dwelling" = Novrod, Nogrod (WJ:414)
nâje "lament" (NAY; see VT45:37 concerning the long vowel. According to the
same source, the final e has a peculiar form in Tolkien's manuscript.)
nakma "jaw" (NAK)
nakt- "biting" (NAY)
ñalatâ (CE) "radiance, glittering reflection"
(from jewels, glass, polished metals or water) (PM:347)
narâka "rushing, rapid, violent" (NÁRAK)
narwâ "fiery red" (NAR1; the wording in this entry in Etym may seem to suggest that this is
a Quenya word, but the long final vowel indicates that it is meant to be Primitive Elvish.)
natsai "gore" (This is not the pl. of Sindarin naith, but an
archaic pl. form that sg. naith is derived from.) (SNAS/SNAT)
naukâ adjective "especially applied to things that though in
themselves full-grown were smaller or shorter than their kind, and were hard,
twisted or ill-shapen" (WJ:413)
nauþe "imagination" (NOWO; the letter þ represents th as in English thing. This sound apparently did not occur in the most
primitive language [though the aspirate TH did], so nauþe must rather
be archaic Quenya. Cf. also the form of the root, suggesting that at the oldest stage, the initial
syllable was *nou- rather than nau-.)
ndæ^r ("Eld" = CE) "bridegroom". From PQ
ndêro. (NDER)
ndâkô "warrior, soldier" (NDAK)
ndan- element "indicating the reversal of an action, so as to
undo or nullify its effect, as in 'undo, go back (the same way), unsay, give
back (the same gift: not another in return)' " (WJ:412). Also
dan-.
Cf. ndangwetha, ndandô.
ndandô "Nando", interpreted "one who goes back on his word or
decision" (the Nandor were so called because they left the march from
Cuiviénen) (WJ:412)
ndangwetha "answer" (noun, may be Old Sindarin), sc. a stem
gweth- "report, give account of" with the prefix ndan-, here
simply meaning *"back" (PM:395)
ndere "bridegroom" (DER, NÊR)
ndêro "bridegroom" (NDER)
ndeuna "second" (NDEW)
ndeuro "follower, successor" (NDEW)
ndîse "bride" (NDIS-SÊ/SÂ; ndis under
I)
ndorê (PQ) "the hard, dry land as opposed to water
or bog" (WJ:413). In the Etymologies defined as "land,
dwelling-place, region where certain people live" (NDOR); this may be
the meaning that developed later. Confused with nôrê.
ndôro "(a particular) land or region" (WJ:413)
ndulla "dark, dusky, obscure" (NDUL)
ndulna (and ndulla) "secret" (DUL, VT45:11)
ndûnê "sunset" (NDÛ)
neinê "tear" (NEI)
neiniel- "tearful" (NEI)
neiti- "moist, dewy" (NEI)
nenle ("nen-le") "brook" (NEN)
neñwi "nose" (NEÑ-WI is the head of an entry in
the Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem"; the stem may be NEÑ, not given separately)
nere, nêr (probably PQ and CE, respectively) "a male
person, a man" (WJ:393)
netere (CE), cardinal "nine" (VT42:27)
nêthê "youth" (NETH)
nethrâ ("neth-râ") "young" (NETH)
ñgol-, ñgolo- the stem of the four following
words (PM:360)
ñgôlê "Science/Philosophy" (PM:360)
ngolda (read *ñgolda) "wise" (ÑGOL)
ñgolodô "Noldo" (WJ:364, 380;
ngolodô, MR:350)
ngolwina (read *ñgolwina) "wise, learned in deep
arts" (ÑGOL)
ñguruk- see ruk-
ñgwalaraukô "balrog, demon" (RUK)
nîbe "front, face" (NIB)
nidwô "bolster, cushion" (NID)
nindi "fragile, thin" (NIN-DI is the head of an entry in the
Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a "stem";
the stem may be NIN, not given separately)
ninkwi "white" (NIK-W)
njadrô "rat" (NYAD)
Ninkwitil(de) Tára a name of Taniquetil, presumably not
belonging to the oldest stage (the accent seems to mark vowel-length rather
than stress) (NIK-W)
ñôle "odour" (ÑOL)
nôrê "family, tribe or group having a common ancestry, the
land or region in which they dwelt" (WJ:413) Confused with
ndôrê.
not- "count" (WÔ)
Nôwê Círdan's original name, difficult to interpret
(PM:392; the PM Index gives Nôwë, but this would seem to
be an error)
nukotta, nukotto "a stunded or ill-shapen thing (or person)" (the
origin of Sindarin nogoth "dwarf") (WJ:413)
nuktâ- "stunt, prevent from coming to completion, stop short, not
allow to continue" (WJ:413)
numê-n "going down", sunset, West (Letters:303)
nûrâ "deep" (NÛ)
nut- "tie" (WÔ)
oijâ "everlasting" (OY)
oio "ever" (Letters:278, said to be "Primitive
Elvish")
okta "strife" (KOT > KOTH); cf. also the entry
OKTÂ (> Quenya ohta "war"), that seems to be a complete
word in itself and not just a "stem". The primitive word was evidently
oktâ.
Olo(s)-fantur > "Noldorin"/Sindarin Olfannor and Quenya Olofantur,
names of the Vala Lórien (ÓLOS; because of the
f in fantur, a sound not occurring in the primitive
language, this must be taken as archaic Quenya.)
olsa- "to dream"
(ÓLOS)
onrô "parent" (ONO)
ontâro "begetter, parent" (evidently masc.)
(ONO)
orku "goblin" (Orc) (ÓROK)
ornâ "uprising, tall" (UT:266)
ornê "tree" (originally applied to straighter and more slender
trees such as birches or rowans; contrast galadâ) (UT:266,
Letters:426, SD:302; the latter source gives pl. ornei.)
Orômê "Orome" (ORÓM; this form is evidently
obsoleted by Arâmê [q.v.] in a later work)
or-tur- "master, conquer" (TUR, VT46:20)
ostô (CE) "fortress, stronghold" (made or
strengthened by art) (WJ:414 - MR:350 gives osto without the long
final vowel, perhaps the compound form since the second element in Quenya
Mandos is there discussed: primitive *mbandô-osto,
*mbandosto???)
otsôja (CE), ordinal "seventh" (VT42:25)
palantîrâ/palantîra "Palantír"
(Letters:427)
panô "plank, fixed board, especially in a floor" (PAN)
pantâ "open" (PAT)
parmâ "book" (PAR)
pathmâ "level space, sward" (PATH)
pathnâ "smooth" (PATH)
patnâ "wide" (PAT)
peltakse "pivot" (PEL)
pendâ "sloping" (WJ:375)
peñe "lip", dual peñû (VT39:11 cf. 9)
Phaj-anâro "radiant sun" (= masc. name Fëanor,
later reinterpreted as "Spirit of Fire") (PHAY)
phaja "spirit" (PM:352, MR:349)
pheren "beech" (BERÉTH)
Phinderauto (masc. name, > Sindarin Finrod) (PHIN)
phindê "a tress" (PM:362)
phini (CE) "a single hair" (PM:362)
phoroti "right" or "north" (PHOR)
poikâ "clean, pure" (POY)
pori "flour, meal" (POR)
potô "animal's foot" (POTÔ is the head of an entry in the
Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
râba "wild, untamed" (RAB)
ragnâ "crooked" (RAG)
rakmê "fathom" (RAK)
râmâ "wing" (RAM)
râmalê "pinion, great wing (of eagle)" (RAM)
rambâ "wall" (RAMBÂ is the head of an entry
in the Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
ramja- "fly, sail; wander" (RAM)
ramna "wing (horn), extended point at side, etc." (RAM)
Ranâ "Moon" (RAN)
randâ "cycle, age" (100 Valian Years) (RAD)
ranku "arm" (RAK)
ratâ "path, track" (RAT)
rattâ/ratta "course, river-bed" (RAT)
râu "lion" (RAW)
rauk- see ruk- and cf. raukô, rauku.
raukô or rauku (CE form of a word said to be present
already in PQ) a word applied to "the larger and more terrible of the enemy
shapes" known to the first Elves (WJ:390)
rautâ "metal" (changed from "copper"). (RAUTÂ is
the head of an entry in the Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete
word and not just a "stem")
reddâ " 'sown', sown field, acre" (marked with a query)
(RED)
rênê (CE) "remembrance" (PM:372)
rîg-anna ("crown-gift" > "Noldorin" fem. name
Rhian, but Rían in Tolkien's later Sindarin) (RIG; cf. the published
Silmarillion)
rîgâ (CE) "wreath, garland" (PM:347)
rîgê "crown" (RIG)
rimbâ "frequent, numerous" (RIM)
rimbê "crowd, host" (RIM)
ringi "cold" (RINGI is the head of an entry in the
Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
rinki "flourish, quick shake" (RIK(H) )
risse- "a ravine" (RIS)
rista- "cut" (RIS)
-ro agental ending, added to ómataina (suffixed
stem-vowel). Also -rô added to stem, with or without
n-infixion, and -rdo > (CE?) -rd.
(WJ:371).
rôda (> rôdh) "cave" (ROD)
rokkô "horse" (Letters:282, 382)
rondô (CE) "a vaulted or arched roof, as seen from below
(and usually not visible from outside)", "a (large) hall or chamber so roofed"
(WJ:414); "cavern" (Letters:282)
ronjô " 'chaser', hound of chase" (ROY1)
rono "arch over, roof in" (WJ:414)
rossê "dew, spray" (of fall or fountain)
(Letters:282)
rot- (also s-rot) "delve underground, excavate, tunnel"
(PM:365); cf. groto (q.v.) and CE rotâ (also
grotâ) "excavation, underground dwelling" (WJ:414)
ruk- one of the "ancient forms" of the stem RUKU, that yielded
the word Orch (Orc) in Sindarin. Other forms include rauk-,
uruk-, urk(u), runk-, rukut/s; also the
"strengthened stem" gruk- and the "elaborated" guruk-,
ñguruk (the latter by combination with a distinct stem NGUR
"horror", WJ:415). None of these derivatives are clearly glossed, though
urku (or uruku) is said to have yielded Quenya
urko, vague in meaning in the lore of the Blessed Realm ("bogey"), but
later recognized as a cognate of Sindarin Orch. The adjective
urkâ is said to mean "horrible" (WJ:389-90).
rukut, rukus see ruk-
rundâ "rough piece of wood" (RUD)
runk- see ruk- (WJ:390)
ruskâ "brown" (RUSKÂ is the head of an entry in
the Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
russâ (CE) ?"red" (PM:366, cf. 353)
sagmâ "poison" (SAG)
sagrâ "bitter" (SAG)
sarnâ "of stone" (STAR)
-se (evidently a pronominal ending meaning "she") (S)
sê/se, also sî/si "she"
(S)
silimâ "silver, shining white" (adj.) (SIL)
silimarille "Silmaril" (RIL - for historical reasons, this
cannot be a PQ word, or hardly even CE; it may be archaic Quenya)
silimê "light of Silpion", also a poetic word for
"silver" (SIL)
sjadta ("syad-ta") "axe-stroke" (SYAD)
sjadâ (meaning unclear; but since this is the origin of
Sindarin hâdh, and Sindarin hadhafang is equated with
Quenya sangahyando "throng-cleaver", hâdh <
sjadâ should mean "cleaver") (SYAD)
sjadnô " 'cleaver', sword" (SYAD)
sjadsê > sjatsê "cleft, gash" (SYAD)
sjalmâ "shell, conch, horn of Ulmo" (SYAL)
sjandô " 'cleaver', sword" (SYAD)
sjatsê - see sjadsê
sjatsela/sjatsêla "broadsword-blade", "axe-blade"
(SYAD)
skalnâ "veiled, hidden, shadowed, shady"
(SKAL1)
skarnâ "wounded" (SKAR)
skarwê "wound" (SKAR)
skelmâ "skin, fell" (SKEL)
skelnâ "naked" (SKEL)
skelta- "strip" (SKEL)
skjapat- "shore" (SKYAP)
slaiwâ "sickly, sick, ill" (SLIW)
slignê "spider, spider's web, cobweb" (SLIG)
slindâ > Quenya linda "fair", blended with primitive
slindi "fine, delicate" (that would regularly have become Quenya
*linde if the words had not been confused) (LIND)
slindi "fine, delicate" (SLIN)
sliñgê "spider, spider's web, cobweb" (SLIG, VT46:14)
slinjâ "lean, thin, meagre" (SLIN)
slîwê "sickness" (SLIW)
sloga, word used for streams of a kind that were variable and liable to overflow their
banks at seasons and cause floods when swollen by rains or melting snow (VT42:9)
smaldâ "gold" (as metal) (SMAL)
smalinâ "yellow" (SMAL)
smalta "gold" (LÁWAR/GLÁWAR cf. SMAL)
smalu "pollen, yellow powder" (SMAL)
smalwâ "fallow, pale" (SMAL)
-so (evidently a pronominal ending meaning "he") (S)
sô/so "he" (also sû/su) (S)
solos "surf" (SOL)
spâna "cloud" (SPAN, VT46:15)
spangâ "beard" (SPÁNAG)
Spanturo "lord of cloud" > Quenya Fantur, surname of
Mandos (SPAN)
spindê "tress, braid of hair" (SPIN; this reconstruction of the
original form of Quenya findë is apparently obsoleted by
phindê in PM:362)
spinê "larch" (SPIN)
srawâ "body" (if = Quenya hroa, the word it yielded)
(MR:350). Cf. mi-srawanwe.
srâwê "flesh" (if = Quenya hrávë, the word it
yielded) (MR:350)
srot- ("s-rot-") "delve underground, excavate, tunnel";
also rot- (PM:365); cf. also groto-
stabnê > stambê "room, chamber"
(STAB)
stabnô, stabrô "carpenter, wright, builder"
(STAB)
staknâ "cleft, split" (also stankâ)
(STAK)
stalga "stalwart, steady, firm" (STÁLAG)
stalrê "steep, falling" (STAL). According to VT46:16, this is "probably" a
misreading for stalrâ in Tolkien's manuscript.
stalgondô "hero, dauntless man" (STÁLAG)
stama- "bar, exclude" (UT:282)
stambê < stabnê "room, chamber"
(STAB)
stangâ > Quenya sanga "crowd, throng, press" and
Sindarin thang "compulsion, duress, need" (STAG)
stangasjandô "throng-cleaver" (sword-name) (SYAD)
stankâ "cleft, split" (also staknâ)
(STAK)
starâna "stiff, hard" (STARAN)
stintâ "short" (STINTÂ is the head of an entry in
the Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
sû/su "he"; also sô/so (S)
suglu "goblet" (SUG; see SUK)
sukmâ "drinking-vessel" (SUK)
swanda "sponge, fungus" (SWAD)
swesta- "to puff" (SWES)
soto "shelter, protect, defend" (WJ:414)
ta3na (meaning unclear, probably "high, lofty, noble")
(TÂ/TA3)
tad "thither" (Evidently CE for PQ *tada, including the
allative ending -da: hence "to that") (TA)
taika (may be Old Sindarin) "boundary, limit, boundary
line" (from tayak, extension of a stem TAYA "mark, line,
limit") (WJ:309)
taikâ "steep, tall, deep" (VT46:17)
takmâ "thing for fixing" (> Quenya tangwa "hasp,
clasp", Sindarin taew "holder, socket, hasp, clasp, staple")
(TAK)
taksê "nail" (TAK)
tal-runja "sole of foot" (TALAM, RUN, VT46:12)
tambâ- "to knock" (TAM, VT46:17)
tamrô "woodpecker" (etymologically "knocker")
(TAM)
tân-nig element that may be the origin of tani- in
Taniqetil (TÂ/TA3)
tankla "pin, brooch" (TAK)
tanô "craftsman, smith" (TAN)
târâ "lofty" (TÂ/TA3, (TÁWAR) )
târa-khil *"high-man" = Númenórean
(KHIL)
targâ "tough, stiff" (TÁRAG)
târî "queen" (wife of a târo)
(TÂ/TA3)
târo "king" (TÂ/TA3)
tathar, tatharê "willow-tree" (TATHAR)
tathrê "willow-tree" (TATHAR)
taurâ "masterful, mighty" (TUR, (TÁWAR,
TÂ/TA3) )
taurê "great wood, forest" (TÁWAR)
tawar "wood" (material) (TÁWAR)
tawarê/taware "dryad, spirit of woods" (evidently
fem.) (TÁWAR, see VT46:17 concerning the stress)
tawarô/tawaro "dryad, spirit of woods" (evidently
masc.) (TÁWAR, see VT46:17 concerning the stress)
[te3ê "path, course, line, direction, way" (TE3)]
tekla "pen" (TEK)
tekmâ, tekma "letter, symbol" (TEK, VT46:17-18; apparently changed by Tolkien
to the forms below)
tekmê, tekme "letter, symbol" (TEK, VT46:17-18)
telesâ "rear" (TELES)
telmâ/telma "hood, covering", also
telmê/telme (TEL/TELU)
telu, tel-u "roof in, put the crown on a building"
(WJ:411)
têñe "line, row" (TEÑ)
[teñmâ "line, row"? (form deleted by Tolkien) (VT46:18)]
teñrâ "straight, right" (TEÑ, TE3, VT46:18)
teñ-wê "sign, token" (VT39:17). Cf. tenwe (WJ:394)
(read teñwe? The word is derived from a stem
TEÑ and yielded Quenya tengwë) "indication, sign, token"
terên, terênê "slender"
(TER/TERES)
terêwâ "piercing, keen" (TER/TERES, see VT46:18 concerning the stress)
thandâ "shield" (apparently noun) (UT:282)
thara- "tall (or long) and slender" (WJ:412)
thausâ "foul, evil-smelling, putrid" (THUS)
thaurâ "detestable" (Letters:380; said to be derived from a
root THAW. The th of thaurâ is spelt with a single (Greek)
letter in the source.)
thaurond- "Sauron, *Detestable One"; said to be derived from
thaurâ, q.v. (Letters:380; the th of thaurâ
and thaurond- is spelt with a single (Greek) letter in the
source.)
thêrê "look, face, expression" (THÊ)
thindi "pallid, grey, wan" (THIN), "grey, pale or silvery
grey" (WJ:384)
tindômiselde "daughter of twilight", a kenning of the nightingale; = Sindarin Tinúviel.
(TIN, SEL-D)
tinkô "metal" (TINKÔ is the head of an entry in the
Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
tinmê "spark, glint" (TIN; according to VT46:19, the first gloss is properly "spark" rather than "sparkle")
tiukâ "thick, fat" (TIW)
tiukô "thigh" (TIW)
tjalañgandô, tjalañgando "harp-player" (TYAL, VT46:20), also tjalañgando with
shortening of the final vowel of the final element of a compound
(ÑGAN/ÑGÁNAD)
tjaliâ- "to play" (TYAL; according to VT46:20, the i is marked with
a diacriticial sign suggesting that it is functioning as a semi-vowel, so we may also read *tjaljâ)
tjulmâ "mast" (TYUL; this reconstruction may be obsoleted by
kjulumâ in SD:419)
tjulussê "poplar-tree" (TYUL)
tollo "island" (TOL2)
tôp- "cover, roof" (TOP)
tor, toron- "brother" (THEL/THELES)
tubnâ "deep" (TUB)
tûghor, tû-gor, Tûgore
"Strength-vigour", masc. name > Sindarin Tuor (TUG, GOR)
tûgu "muscle, sinew, vigour, physical strength" (TUG)
tuilê > Quenya tuile "spring-time", also used = "dayspring,
early morn" (TUY)
tuilelindô "swallow", etymologically "spring-singer"
(TUY)
tuimâ "a sprout, bud" (TUY)
Tulkatho (name of a Vala; = Quenya Tulkas)
(TULUK)
tulku "support, prop" (TULUK)
tultâ- "make come" (TUL, VT46:20)
tulukmê "support, prop" (noun) (TULUK)
tumbu "deep valley", under or among hills (TUB)
tumpu "hump" (TUMPU is the head of an entry in the
Etymologies, but it seems to be a complete word and not just a
"stem")
Tûnâ/Tûna name of an Elf-city in
Valinor (TUN)
tundâ "tall" (TUN)
tundu "hill, mound" (TUN)
tungâ "taut, tight" (of strings:) "resonant" (TUG)
tupsê "thatch" (TUP)
tûrê "mastery, victory" (TUR)
tûrô, also turo, -tur? "master, victor,
lord" (TUR; turo, TÂ, TA3)
turumâ, turumbê "shield"
(TURÚM, see VT46:20 concerning the stress in the former word)
tussâ "bush" (TUS; tussa,
ÓR-NI)
-û dual element, used of natural pairs
(Letters:427); see besû, lasû, peñû
ûbanô "monster" (BAN)
ubrâ "abundant" (UB)
ugu "not-, un-, in-" (UGU/UMU)
Ui-nend "Uinen" (NEN)
ulda "torrent, mountain-stream" (ULU)
ulgundô "monster, deformed and hideous creature"
(ÚLUG)
uljâ "it is raining" (ULU)
Ulumô name of the Vala of all waters > Quenya Ulmo
(ULU)
uñgwê "gloom" (UÑG)
urkâ "horrible" (WJ:390)
urkô, urk(u), uruku ?"Orc"
(WJ:390); cf. ruk-
uruk ?"Orc" (WJ:390); cf. ruk-
usukwê, uskwê ("usuk-wê, usk-wê")
> Quenya usqe, Sindarin osp "reek", Ilk usc "smoke" (USUK)
Utubnu name of Melko[r]'s vaults in the North > Quenya
Utumno (TUB). In MR:69, the primitive form of the name is cited as Utupnu instead.
wa ("Eld" = CE) "together" (WÔ);
wa-nôrô "of one kin" > Quenya onóro "brother",
Old Sindarin wanúro/Sindarin gwanur "kinsman" (TOR)
wâ- a verbal stem (not glossed: ?"go away"), perfect
awâwiiê; connected with au, awâ;
possibly also used in composition with verbal stems (WJ:361).
wâ-delo (WJ:364) = awa-delô
?wâ-delô (CE) *"Away-goer", a name made in
Beleriand for those who finally departed from Middle-earth. Also
awa-delo, awâ-delo. (WJ:360, 363)
wæ^de "bond, compact, oath" (WED; must be CE because of the
vowel æ; PQ *wêdê; cf.
ndæ^r).
wa3râ "soiled, dirty" (WA3)
wahsê "stain" (WA3)
wahtâ- "to soil, stain" (WA3)
wahtê "a stain" (WA3)
wâjâ "envelope", especially of the Outer Sea or Air
enfolding the world within the Ilurambar or world-walls (WAY, [GEY]; see VT45:15 concerning the stress)
wanjâ "Vanya-elf", Quenya pl. Vanyar, the first clan
of the Eldar (WJ:380). But in the Etymologies, Quenya
vanya is said to come from banjâ (BAN), and
in his last years Tolkien apparently returned to this idea: in PM:402, it is
said that "of old" the name Vanyar was Banyai (evidently ancient
Quenya for primitive *banjâi).
wannâ "departed, dead" (WAN)
wanwê "death" (act of dying, not death as a state or
abstract) (WAN)
wath "shade" (WA3; but wath = stem WATH)
-wê abstract suffix (WEG)
we3ê "manhood, vigour" (WEG; given this root, this word must be proto-Quenya for earlier *wegê)
[wed-tâ] "swear" (to do something) (WED)
wedâ "bond" (WED)
wegô "man", in compounds -wego with short final
vowel (WEG)
wegtê ("weg-tê") (Unglossed; Christopher
Tolkien therefore thinks the entry WEG "was left unfinished", but this is
rather the primitive form of the element -waith, -weith in
Sindarin Forodweith, Forodwaith "Northmen" mentioned just
before.) (WEG)
-wego, -weg (compound form) "man", frequent element
in masculine names (WEG)
wei (archaic element meaning "wind, weave") (WEY)
weirê "Weaver", the archaic form that yielded Quenya
Vairë, name of a Valië (stem WEY "weave", LR:398). Note,
however, that Tolkien in a later source derives Vairë from a
stem WIR and states that it is A-infixed to express "Ever-weaving";
this would point to a primitive form *Wairê (not explicitly
mentioned). (VT39:10)
wen- "maiden" (WEN/WENED)
wilmâ "air, lower air" (distinct from the 'upper' air of
the stars, or the 'outer'). Changed by Tolkien from wilwâ.
(WIL)
[windi "blue-grey, pale blue or grey" (WIN/WIND)]
windiâ "pale blue" (It is uncertain whether Tolkien rejected
this word or not.) (WIN/WIND; according to VT46:21 the final i is marked with
a diacritical sign indicating that it functions as a semi-vowel, so we may also read
*windjâ)
wingê "foam, crest of wave, crest" (WIG)
[winjâ "evening" (WIN/WIND)]
[winta- "fade" (WIN/WIND; see VT46:21 concerning the stress)]
wô, prefix wo- "together", a dual adverb "together",
referring to the junction of two things, or groups, in a pair or whole.
(WJ:361) The Etymologies likewise has wô, wo
"together" (evidently PQ, since it yielded CE wa), but nothing is there
said about this being exclusively dual. (WÔ)
Wolwê (CE) hypothetical early form of
Olwë; Tolkien points out that this should rather have yielded
Volwë in Telerin, so this reconstruction may be doubtful
(PM:357)
(Y - see J)