Noldorin
nordh
noun. cord
nordh
adjective. cord
Cognates
- ᴺQ. nurda “cord, rope”
Derivations
- ᴹ√SNUR “twist” ✧ Ety/SNUR
Phonetic Developments
Development Stages Sources ᴹ√SNUR > norð [snurda] > [n̥urda] > [n̥urða] > [n̥orða] > [n̥orð] > [norð] ✧ Ety/SNUR Variations
- norð ✧ Ety/SNUR
doron
noun. oak
doron
noun. oak
Changes
derœin/deren→ dœrœin/deren ✧ Ety/DÓRONCognates
- ᴹQ. norno “oak” ✧ Ety/DÓRON
Derivations
- ᴹ√DORON “oak” ✧ Ety/DÓRON
Phonetic Developments
Development Stages Sources ᴹ√DÓRON > doron [doronō] > [dorono] > [doron] ✧ Ety/DÓRON ᴹ√DÓRON > dœrœin/deren [doroni] > [dœrœni] > [dœrœin] > [derein] > [deren] ✧ Ety/DÓRON Variations
- deren ✧ EtyAC/DÓRON
- derœin/deren ✧ EtyAC/DÓRON (
derœin/deren)
A word in The Etymologies of the 1930s derived from the root ᴹ√DORON (Ety/DÓRON).
Conceptual Development: The Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s had G. Dorna “ilex, holm oak” (GL/30), cognate of ᴱQ. norne “oak-tree” which was derived from the early root ᴱ√NOŘO [NDOÐO?] in the contemporaneous Qenya Lexicon (QL/67). The Gnomish word became dorn “oak” in Gnomish Lexicon Slips modifying that document (PE13/113). See ᴱN. gorw “oak” for other early “oak” words.
Neo-Sindarin: Tolkien introduced words S. norð and Q. nordo “oak” in notes from the late 1950s or early 1960s (PE17/25). I prefer the form Q. norno “oak” as better-established and more etymologically interesting. I would thus use [N.] doron “oak” for purposes of Neo-Sindarin, which make it easier for us to retain N. nordh “cord” as well (Ety/SNUR).