Primitive elvish
nenda
noun. water
Derivations
- √NEN “water, water, [ᴱ√] flow”
Element in
- S. Núrnen “Sad Water, Dead Water” ✧ PE17/087
nēnā
adjective. wet
Derivations
- √NEN “water, water, [ᴱ√] flow” ✧ PE17/052; PE17/167
Derivatives
Variations
- nēna ✧ PE17/167
pendā
adjective. sloping
Derivations
- √PED “slope, slant down” ✧ PE17/173; WJ/375
Derivatives
nen
root. water, water, [ᴱ√] flow
Derivatives
- ✶nē̆n “water”
- ✶nēnā “wet” ✧ PE17/052; PE17/167
- ✶nenda “water”
- Q. nén “water, water, [ᴱQ.] river” ✧ PE17/052; SA/nen
- Q. nenda “wet” ✧ PE17/167
- Q. nendë “lake, lake, [ᴹQ.] pool” ✧ PE17/052
- ᴺQ. nendo “water mead, *watered plain”
- S. nen “water; lake, pool; (lesser) river, water; lake, pool; (lesser) river, [ᴱN.] stream” ✧ PE17/052; SA/nen
Element in
- ✶nēn-talma “Wetwang, Nindalf” ✧ PE17/167
Variations
- NEN- ✧ PE17/145
- NĒ̆N ✧ PE17/167
- nen ✧ SA/nen
nē̆n
noun. water
Derivations
- √NEN “water, water, [ᴱ√] flow”
Derivatives
A root connected to water and (to a lesser extent) rivers for much of Tolkien’s life. It first appearance was as ᴱ√NENE “flow” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, though Tolkien marked both the root and the gloss with a “?”; it had derivatives like ᴱQ. nen “river, †water” and ᴱQ. nēnu “yellow water lily” (QL/65). Under this entry Tolkien noted that “nen water is perhaps different from nen river, which is from neře” (QL/65); elsewhere in QL Tolkien gave ᴱ√NERE² or ᴱ√NEŘE [NEÐE] as the basis for nen (nend-) “river”, a root he said was often confused with ᴱ√NESE “give to feed; feed, pasture; graze” (QL/66). In the contemporaneous Gnomish Lexicon he had G. nenn “(1) water, (2) river” and G. nendil “water fay” which were probably a blending of NENE and NEÐE, as well as G. nern “brook” from ✱nere¹ (GL/60), probably corresponding to ᴱ√NERE² from QL.
In The Etymologies of the 1930s Tolkien had unglossed ᴹ√NEN with derivatives like ᴹQ. nén/N. nen “water” and ᴹQ. nelle “brook” (Ety/NEN), whereas ᴱ√NERE² and ᴱ√NEÐE from the 1910s seems to have been abandoned. The primitive form √NEN or nē̆n “water” continued to appear regularly in Tolkien’s writings from the 1940s, 50s and 60s (PE17/52, 167; PE19/102; PE21/64, 79).