Primitive elvish

me

pronoun. we (exclusive)

Primitive elvish [PE17/130; PE23/069; PE23/113; PE23/114; PE23/119; PE23/120; PE23/131; VT47/25; VT48/10; VT49/50; VT49/52] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-mē

suffix. -mē

mel

root. love, love, [ᴹ√] love (as friend)

This root was the basis for Elvish “love” words for all of Tolkien’s life. The root first appeared as ᴱ√MELE “love” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s with derivatives like ᴱQ. mel- “to love”, ᴱQ. meles(se) “love”, and ᴱQ. melin “dear, beloved” (QL/60). In the contemporaneous Gnomish Lexicon it had similar derivatives like G. mel- “love” and G. melon “dear, beloved” (GL/57).

In The Etymologies of the 1930s Tolkien specified that ᴹ√MEL meant “love (as friend)”, and for the first time it included the derivative N. mellon “friend” (Ety/MEL); Gnomish “friend” words from the 1910s were mostly based on G. ged (GL/38). However, the same entry included ᴹQ. melindo/ᴹQ. melisse “lover” (male and female), so it seems even in the 1930s it could refer to romantic love (Ety/MEL). The root continued to appear in Tolkien’s later writings associated with “love” (PE18/46, 96; PE17/41; VT39/10).

In notes from 1959, Tolkien elaborated on the precise sense of √MEL and its role in romantic and non-romantic love:

> Love, which Men might call “friendship” (but for the greater strength and warmth and permanency with which it was felt by the Quendi) was represented by √mel. This was primarily a motion or inclination of the fëa [“spirit”], and therefore could occur between persons of the same sex or different sexes. It included no sexual or procreative desire, though naturally in Incarnates the difference of sex altered the emotion, since “sex” is held by the Eldar to belong also to the fëa and not solely to the hröa [“body”], and is therefore not wholly included in procreation ... The “desire” for marriage and bodily union was represented by √yer; but this never in the uncorrupted occurred without “love” √mel, nor without the desire for children. This element was therefore seldom used except to describe occasions of its dominance in the process of courting and marriage. The feelings of lovers desiring marriage, and of husband and wife, were usually described by √mel. This “love” remained, of course, permanent after the satisfaction of √yer in the “Time of the Children”; but was strengthened by this satisfaction and the memory of it to a normally unbreakable bond (NM/20).

Thus √MEL was close in sense to Greek “philia”, used of friendship, whereas √YER was used of “eros” or sexual desire. But in Elvish thinking, √MEL was essential for romantic love, and √YER only arose from that. Furthermore, √YER was not the most important element in the love between romantic partners, as the period of procreation and child-rearing took up a relatively small portion of Elvish lives. It was the more enduring feeling of friendship between lovers that really mattered, and thus √MEL was used of both non-romantic and romantic love, though it had not particular sexual connotation.

Primitive elvish [NM/016; NM/020; PE17/041; PE17/165; PE18/096; PE22/129; SA/mel; VT39/10] Group: Eldamo. Published by

melā

verb. love

Primitive elvish [PE 22:134] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

sa

pronoun. 3 sg. neuter [it], the thing, impersonal; this by me, 3 sg. neuter [it], the thing, impersonal, [ᴹ✶] demonstrative; this by me

Primitive elvish [PE23/113; PE23/114; PE23/119; PE23/120; PE23/130; PE23/131; PE23/132; VT49/37; VT49/52] Group: Eldamo. Published by

si

pronoun. this (by me)

Primitive elvish [PE23/130; PE23/131; PE23/132; PE23/135; VT49/18] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-mē̆n

suffix. instrumental, with (which)

Primitive elvish [PE21/79] Group: Eldamo. Published by

nis

root. woman

This root first appeared in The Etymologies of the 1930s as ᴹ√NIS “woman”, an extension of ᴹ√ “female” (Ety/NIS). It also had a strengthened form ᴹ√NDIS, unglossed but apparently meaning “bride” based on its derivatives ᴹQ. indis/N. dîs of that meaning (Ety/NDIS). Unstrengthened ᴹ√NIS seems to have survived only in Quenya as the basis for ᴹQ. nis (niss-) “woman”, but this word was also blended with ✱ndis-sē to produce a longer form nisse of the same meaning.

In Tolkien’s later writings, both short Q. nís and longer nissë appeared as words for “woman” (MR/213; VT47/33) and Q. indis reappeared as well, though glossed “wife” (UT/8). As primitive forms, both unstrengthened √nis (VT47/33) and strengthened ✶ndī̆s “woman” also appeared in later writings, the latter given as the feminine equivalent of ✶[[p|n[d]ēr]] “man” (PE19/102).

Primitive elvish [VT47/18; VT47/33] Group: Eldamo. Published by

sam

root. to have, have; [ᴹ√] unite, join

The root ᴹ√SAM “unite, join” was a later addition to The Etymologies of the 1930s with the derivative ᴹQ. samnar “diphthongs” (Ety/SAM). There is also evidence for it in the word ᴹQ. sampane “combination” as in ᴹQ. Lámasampane “Combination of Sounds”, a term used in the first version of the Tengwesta Qenderinwa (TQ1) from the 1930s (PE18/40), and again in the second version (TQ2) from around 1950 (PE18/90). In an isolated note from the late 1930s, Tolkien gave ᴹ√kam “bind, join” as a replacement for √sam along with a new word ᴹQ. okamna “diphthong” (VT44/13), but given the reappearance of Q. sampanë in TQ2 this may have been a transient idea, and in any case Tolkien used the word Q. ohlon for “diphthong” in the 1950s and 60s (VT39/9; VT48/29).

In notes grouped with Definitive Linguistic Notes (DLN) from 1959, Tolkien gave √SAM as the basis for Elvish verbs for “to have”, with Q. samin and S. sevin “✱I have” (PE17/173). Whether this was connected to 1930s ᴹ√SAM “unite, join” is unclear. In notes associated with the 1959-60 essay Ósanwe-kenta, Tolkien gave the root √SAM with the gloss “mind, think, reflect, be aware” (VT41/5), but in later writings he used √SAN for “think, use mind” instead (PE22/158); see that entry for discussion.

Neo-Eldarin: For purposes of Neo-Eldarin, I’d use √SAM = “have”.

Primitive elvish [PE17/173; PE17/183] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-(u)mē

suffix. denoting a (single) action

Primitive elvish [PE17/068; PE22/138; WJ/416] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-nyā

pronoun. my

Primitive elvish [PE23/128; PE23/129] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-(a)rē

suffix. abstract noun

Primitive elvish [PE22/138] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-b(iy)ē

suffix. -ing

Primitive elvish [PE22/129] Group: Eldamo. Published by

kelumē

verb. kelumē

Primitive elvish [PE18/086] Group: Eldamo. Published by

labmē

noun. *language

Primitive elvish [WJ/416] Group: Eldamo. Published by

leñwe

noun. leñwe

Primitive elvish [PE19/097] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mat-

verb. to eat

Primitive elvish [PE17/131; PE18/106; PE22/129; PE22/130; PE22/131; PE22/132; PE22/134; PE22/136; PE22/139; PE22/157; VT39/09] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ndakta-

verb. to slay

Primitive elvish [PE22/156] Group: Eldamo. Published by

sīru

noun. stream

Primitive elvish [PE21/80] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-lmē

suffix. 1st person plural a (exclusive)

Primitive elvish [PE23/117; PE23/118; PE23/124; PE23/125; PE23/126] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-m(iy)ē

suffix. -ing

Primitive elvish [PE22/129] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-smē

suffix. 1st person dual a (exclusive)

Primitive elvish [PE23/117; PE23/118; PE23/125; PE23/126] Group: Eldamo. Published by

mi

pronoun. we (exclusive)

Primitive elvish [PE23/114; PE23/120] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ndilā

verb. love, be devoted to

Primitive elvish [PE 22:134] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by