Beware, older languages below! The languages below were invented during Tolkien's earlier period and should be used with caution. Remember to never, ever mix words from different languages!

Middle Primitive Elvish

ini

root. INI

Middle Primitive Elvish Group: Eldamo. Published by

inik

root. *idea

A root in The Etymologies of the 1930s given as ᴹ√INK and ᴹ√INIK, the latter marked with a “?” but probably representing the actual form of the root (Ety/INK). The root was unglossed, but its derivatives all seem to be related to the sense “idea” such as ᴹQ. inka “idea”, ᴹQ. intya [< inkya] “guess, supposition, idea, notion” and N. inc “guess, idea, notion” (Ety/INK; EtyAC/INK). It might be connected to the later root √IN(ID) “mind” from 1957 (PE17/155).

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/INK] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nī/ini

root. female

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/BES; Ety/ƷAN; Ety/INI; Ety/NDIS; Ety/NETH; Ety/Nι; Ety/NIS; EtyAC/ƷAN; EtyAC/NETH; EtyAC/Nι; PE21/55] Group: Eldamo. Published by

melā-

verb. to love

Middle Primitive Elvish [PE22/095] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mit

root. small

A deleted root in The Etymologies of the 1930s glossed “small” with various Quenya and Noldorin derivatives of similar meaning (Ety/MIT).

Middle Primitive Elvish [EtyAC/MIT] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mitra

adjective. small

Middle Primitive Elvish [EtyAC/MIT] Group: Eldamo. Published by

rasat

root. twelve

The root ᴹ√RÁSAT “twelve” appeared in The Etymologies of the 1930s, and students of Elvish long supposed that its unattested derivative ✱rasta was the Quenya word for “twelve”. In later publications, however, the Quenya word for “twelve” was given as yunquë (VT47/41), derived from primitive ✶yūnekē.

This word yunquë dates back to Early Quenya, first appearing as ᴱQ. yunqe in the Early Qenya Grammar from the 1920s (PE14/82), so it is likely that the √RASAT “twelve” co-existed with ✶yūnekē when that root was introduced in the 1930s. In currently published materials, rasta only appears as a suffix in yurasta “twenty four” (twice-twelve) in a discussion of the Elvish duodecimal (base twelve) counting system, also probably from the 1930s (PE14/17). It may be that ✶yūnekē was used for the general word for “twelve”, while √RASAT was used for “groups of twelve” as part of this duodecimal system. If so, it may have only been used as a suffix in grouping words in this counting system.

Middle Primitive Elvish [Ety/RÁSAT; PE14/017] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ŋgolóndē

proper name. Gnome-realm

Middle Primitive Elvish [PE18/040] Group: Eldamo. Published by