Quenya 

aranórë

place name. Kingsland

The Quenya equivalent of Arnor, with many variants (Aranórë being the most easily decomposed). It is a compound of either ar(a)- “royal” or aran “king”, with the second element either nórë or -ndor “land”. See the entry for Arnor for further discussion.

Cognates

  • S. Arnor “Royal Land” ✧ Let/428; PE17/028

Derivatives

  • S. Arnor “Royal Land” ✧ Let/428; PE17/028; PE17/118

Elements

WordGloss
aran“king”
nórë“land, country; †people, race, tribe, land, country, [ᴹQ.] region where certain people live, [ᴱQ.] nation; [Q.] †people, race, tribe, [ᴹQ.] folk, [ᴱQ.] family”

Variations

  • arnanórë/arnanor ✧ Let/428
  • arn(a)dor ✧ Let/428
  • Arandóre ✧ PE17/028
  • aranōre ✧ PE17/028 (✶aranōre)
  • Aranor ✧ PE17/118
  • Arandor ✧ UT/165; UTI/Arandor
Quenya [Let/428; PE17/028; PE17/118; UT/165; UTI/Arandor] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Arnanórë

arnor

Arnanórë, Arnanor place-name "Arnor", Royal Land (so #arna = "royal"?) (Letters:428). Cf. Arandórë.

Sindarin 

Arnor

noun. Arnor

royal land; ar (prefix “high, noble, royal”) + (n-)dor (“land, dwelling”) Arnor was retained to avoid Ardor and was later explained as the blending of Quenya Arnanóre with S arn(a)dor > ardor

Sindarin [Tolkiendil] Group: Tolkiendil Compound Sindarin Names. Published by

Arnor

Land of the King

Arnor was the colloquial name for the North Kingdom. The North Kingdom, as the land was called at its conception, was also known as Turmen Follondiéva in Quenya and Arthor na Forlonnas in Sindarin. These names quickly fell out of use, in favor of Arnor: the Land of the King, so called for the kingship of Elendil, and to seal its precedence over the southern realm. In full, poetic Sindarin, it was called Arannor, which mirrored its Quenya name, Arandórë. Though technically Arandórë would have a Sindarin form Ardor, Tolkien chose Arnor because it sounded better. This linguistic change was ascribed to a later, Mannish development of Sindarin. The form Arnanórë is also seen.

Sindarin [Tolkien Gateway "Arnor"] Published by