In the earliest Lost Tales, the name of the son of ᴱQ. Inwe (LT1/22). The son’s name contains an earlier, rejected name ᴱQ. Ing for his father. In unrelated story fragments from the 1920s, the name Ing was also used for a great lord who ruled England (LT2/301), and as such Ingil appeared as an element of the name ᴱQ. Ingilnóre “England” (QL/42). The name ᴹQ. Ingil still appeared in The Etymologies as a derivative of ᴹ√ING (Ety/ING), but in the contemporaneous narratives the name was changed to ᴹQ. Ingwiel. See Q. Ingwion for later developments of this name.
Early Quenya
ing
masculine name. Ing
ingil
masculine name. Ingil
ingwaiwar
collective name. Ingwaiwar
A name for the Anglo-Saxons derived from the name of their leader Inwe or Ing (LT2/304-5).
ingilnóre
place name. Tol Eressea, England
ingwil(in)
noun. eel
This noun appeared as ingwil or ingwilin (ingwiling-) “eel” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, a combination of ᴱQ. ingwe “fish” and ᴱQ. lin (ling-) “snake” (QL/43). The word ingwil(in) “eel” also appeared in the Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa (PME/43).
Neo-Quenya: I would update this word to ᴺQ. lingwileuca “eel” for purposes of Neo-Quenya, a combination of the later words Q. lingwë “fish” and Q. leuca “snake”.
ingwe
noun. fish
isilmo
masculine name. Isilmo
inwe
masculine name. Inwe
ormin
noun. top
aire
adjective. old
elk
noun. spear
elt
noun. spear
en(we)
noun. name
minya
ordinal. first
ô
preposition. from
A rejected name of Inwe (LT1/22) later reappearing as the (early) Noldorin cognate of that name: ᴱN. In(g) (SM/13, 84; PE13/148).