Sindarin 

pend

penda

adj. Q. penda. >> penn, pind, pinn

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:173] < *_pendā_ steepy, sloping < PED fall in steep slant, incline, slope. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

pend

noun/adjective. slope, steep incline, hill side; sloping (down), steeply inclined, slope, steep incline, hill side, [N.] declivity; [S.] sloping (down), steeply inclined

A noun for “slope” (RC/525) or a “steep incline, hill side” (PE17/24), also used as an adjective for “steeply inclined, sloping down” (PE17/24) or “steeply sloping” (PE17/173). In keeping with the general conventions of this lexicon, I represent it as pend since Tolkien said -nd frequently survived “at the end of fully accented monosyllables” (LotR/1115), but in his notes Tolkien marked pend as Old Sindarin and gave penn as the modern form (PE17/24, 173).

Conceptual Development: The earliest appearance of this word was in Early Noldorin Word-lists of the 1920s as ᴱN. benn (†bend) with glosses like “inclined, sloping” (PE13/138) or “slanting, sloping, up or down hill” (PE13/160). In this period it as derived from primitive ᴱ✶bendā and was an adjective only; the noun form was ᴱN. binn.

In The Etymologies of the 1930s it first appeared as N. denn (†dend) “sloping” as a derivative of ᴹ√DEN “hillside, slope”, but the meaning of this root was change to ᴹ√DEN “hole; gap, passage” (Ety/DEN). Tolkien introduced a new root ᴹ√PEN(ED) with the derivative N. penn (†pend) “declivity” (Ety/PEN). In later writings, though, its root form was √PED instead of ᴹ√PEN, as √PEN was given the new sense “lack, be without” (PE17/173; WJ/375).

Sindarin [PE17/024; PE17/173; RC/525] Group: Eldamo. Published by

pend

slope

pl1. pind _n. _slope. >> #penn, pind, pinn

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:24] < O.S. _pend _steep incline, hill side. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

penn

penda

adj. Q. penda. >> pend

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:173] < *_pendā_ steepy, sloping < PED fall in steep slant, incline, slope. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

penn

slope

pl1. pinn _n. _slope. >> #pend

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:24] _-_. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

penn

noun. declivity, slope

Sindarin [Ety/380, RC/525, X/ND1] Group: SINDICT. Published by

pend

declivity

pend (i bend, o phend; construct pen) (fall), pl. pind (i phind), coll. pl. pennath

pend

declivity

(i bend, o phend; construct pen) (fall), pl. pind (i phind), coll. pl. pennath

pendrad

stairway

pendrad (i bendrad, o phendrad) (passage up or down slope), pl. pendraid (i phendraid). A side-form ends in -rath instead of -rad.

pendrad

stairway

(i bendrad, o phendrad) (passage up or down slope), pl. pendraid (i phendraid). A side-form ends in -rath instead of -rad.

pendrad

passage up or down slope

pendrad (i bendrad, o phendrad) (stairway), pl. pendraid (i phendraid). A side-form ends in -rath instead of -rad.

pendrad

passage up or down slope

pendrad (i bendrad, o phendrad) (stairway), pl. pendraid (i phendraid). A side-form ends in -rath instead of -rad.

pendrad

passage up or down slope

(i bendrad, o phendrad) (stairway), pl. pendraid (i phendraid). A side-form ends in -rath instead of -rad.

pind

slope

(noun) 1) #pind (i bind; construct pin) (declivity), no distinct pl. form except with article (i phind), coll. pl. pinnath (in the name Pinnath Gelin). 2) talad (i dalad, o thalad) (incline), pl. telaid (i thelaid).

pind

declivity

*pind (i bind; construct pin) (slope), no distinct pl. form except with article (i phind), coll. pl. pinnath (in the name Pinnath Gelin).

lant

fall

_(noun) _1) #lant (pl. laint, coll. pl. lannath). This is apparently a Quenya borrowing, dant being the native Sindarin word. Note: a homophone means ”clearing in forest”. 2) pend (i bend, o phend; construct pen) (declivity), pl. pind (i phind), coll. pl. pennath. 3)

lant

fall

(pl. laint, coll. pl. lannath). This is apparently a Quenya borrowing, dant being the native Sindarin word. Note: a homophone means ”clearing in forest”. 2) pend (i bend, o phend; construct pen) (declivity), pl. pind (i phind), coll. pl. pennath. 3)

adlann

adjective. sloping, tilted

Sindarin [Ety/390, X/TL, X/ND4] Group: SINDICT. Published by

adlanna-

verb. to slope, slant

Sindarin [Ety/390, X/TL] Group: SINDICT. Published by

danna

fall

_ v. _fall. Q. lanta-.

Sindarin [(PE17 Sindarin Corpus) PE17:66] DAN-TA. Group: Parma Eldalamberon 17 Sindarin Corpus. Published by

danna-

verb. to fall

Written dant- in the Etymologies

Sindarin [Ety/354, X/Z] Group: SINDICT. Published by

dant

noun. fall

Sindarin [MR/373] Group: SINDICT. Published by

ethir

noun. mouth (of a river), estuary

Sindarin [LotR/II:X, Ety/356, RC/350] ed+sîr "outflow". Group: SINDICT. Published by

iant

noun. bridge

Sindarin [Ety/400, S/432] Group: SINDICT. Published by

iant

noun. bridge

Sindarin [AotM/062; SA/iant; SD/129] Group: Eldamo. Published by

lant

noun. fall

Sindarin [Lanthir S/406, PM/349] Q lanta. Group: SINDICT. Published by

adlanna

slope

(vb.) *adlanna- (slant) (i adlanna, in adlannar). This is a suggested Sindarin form of ”Noldorin” atlanna-.

adlanna

slope

(slant) (i adlanna, in adlannar). This is a suggested Sindarin form of ”Noldorin” atlanna-.

adlod

sloping

(adj.) *adlod (tilted), pl. adloen. This is a suggested Sindarin form of ”Noldorin” aclod (VT46:17)

adlod

sloping

(tilted), pl. adloen. This is a suggested Sindarin form of ”Noldorin” aclod (VT46:17) 

ambenn

sloping upward

(uphill), pl. embinn

dadbenn

sloping down

(downhill, inclined, prone [to do]), lenited dhadbenn, pl. dedbinn.

dadbenn

sloping down

(adj.) dadbenn (downhill, inclined, prone [to do]), lenited dhadbenn, pl. dedbinn. SLOPING UPWARD (adj.) ambenn (uphill), pl. embinn

danna

fall

(verb) ?danna- (i dhanna, i nannar), pa.t. dant, past participle ("fallen") dannen, pl. dennin.

danna

fall

(i dhanna, i nannar), pa.t. dant, past participle ("fallen") dannen, pl. dennin.

dant

fall, falling

(i dhant) (autumn), pl. daint (i naint), also (and maybe particularly when the meaning is "autumn") dannas (i dhannas), pl. dannais (i nannais) (PM:135)

dath

steep fall

(i dhath) (hole, pit, abyss), pl. daith (i naith) (VT45:8).

nightfall

(i dhû) (night, dusk, late evening, darkness), pl. dui (i nui) (SD:302)

gobem

noun. mouth

Sindarin Group: Eldamo - neologism/reconstructions. Published by

iant

bridge

(yoke), pl. iaint, coll. pl. iannath.

ianu

bridge

1) *ianu, analogical pl. ieny.; coll. pl. likely ianwath, given the archaic form ianw (which is the form listed in the Etymologies), 2) iant (yoke), pl. iaint, coll. pl. iannath. SKY-BRIDGE, see RAINBOW

ianu

bridge

analogical pl. ieny.; coll. pl. likely ianwath, given the archaic form ianw (which is the form listed in the Etymologies)

lanthir

waterfall

(no distinct pl. form). Coll. pl. lanthiriath.

Noldorin 

pend

noun. declivity, slope

Noldorin [Ety/380, RC/525, X/ND1] Group: SINDICT. Published by

pendrethdulur

place name. Dimrill-stair

An Elvish name for the Dimrill stair appearing in Lord of the Rings drafts from the 1940s (RS/433). Its initial element is probably a variant of pendrath “stairway” as suggested by Christopher Tolkien, but the meaning of the final element is unclear. Roman Rausch speculated on some possibilities (EE/1.16).

Noldorin [RS/433; RSI/Pendrethdulur] Group: Eldamo. Published by

pendrath

noun. passage up or down slope, stairway

A noun for a “passage up or down slope, stairway” in The Etymologies of the 1930s with variants pendrath and pendrad, probably a combination of N. penn “declivity, ✱slope” and either N. rath “course” or its root ᴹ√RAT (Ety/PEN, RAT).

pendrad

noun. passage up or down slope, stairway

Noldorin [Ety/380, X/ND3] pend+rath, pend+râd. Group: SINDICT. Published by

pendrad

noun. passage up or down slope, stairway

pendrath

noun. passage up or down slope, stairway

Noldorin [Ety/380, X/ND3] pend+rath, pend+râd. Group: SINDICT. Published by

penn

noun. declivity

Noldorin [Ety/DEN; Ety/PEN] Group: Eldamo. Published by

penn

noun. declivity, slope

Noldorin [Ety/380, RC/525, X/ND1] Group: SINDICT. Published by

*tlāta

adjective. sloping

ON. sloping

Noldorin [PE 18:38] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

tlaud

adjective. sloping

sloping

Noldorin [PE 18:38] Group: Mellonath Daeron. Published by

atland

adjective. sloping, tilted

Noldorin [Ety/390, X/TL, X/ND4] Group: SINDICT. Published by

atlanna-

verb. to slope, slant

Noldorin [Ety/390, X/TL] Group: SINDICT. Published by

dant-

verb. to fall

Written dant- in the Etymologies

Noldorin [Ety/354, X/Z] Group: SINDICT. Published by

ethir

noun. mouth (of a river), estuary

Noldorin [LotR/II:X, Ety/356, RC/350] ed+sîr "outflow". Group: SINDICT. Published by

iant

noun. bridge

Noldorin [Ety/400, S/432] Group: SINDICT. Published by

ianw

noun. bridge

@@@ invalid in Sindarin since in this combination voiced stops became spirants after vowels

Noldorin [Ety/YAT; EtyAC/YAT] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tlaud

adjective. sloping

Quenya 

pendë

slope, downslope, declivity

pendë noun "slope, downslope, declivity" (PEN/PÉNED), "steep incline, hill side" (PE17:24)

penda

adjective. sloping down, (steeply) inclined

An adjective meaning “sloping”, usually “sloping down” (PE17/24), with am(ba)penda being “uphill, ✱sloping up” (Ety/AM²). The adjective penda also has an implication of steeply sloping (PE17/173).

Conceptual Development: The word ᴱQ. penda first appeared in the Early Noldorin Dictionary as an element in ᴱQ. ambapenda “uphill”. Its Early Noldorin and Early Telerin cognates ᴱN. benn and ᴱT. benda were used for both sloping up and down hill, so the Early Qenya form was likely the same. The primitive form in this document was ᴱ✶bendā, with initial b- &gt; p- as was the case in Early Qenya (later b- &gt; v-).

In The Etymologies of the 1930s it first appeared as ᴹQ. nenda “sloping” derived from ᴹ√DEN “hillside, slope”, but the meaning of this root was change to ᴹ√DEN “hole; gap, passage” (Ety/DEN). Tolkien introduced a new root ᴹ√PEN(ED) with the derivative ᴹQ. penda “sloping down, inclined” (Ety/PEN), and this notion that penda was specifically for downwards slopes reappeared in later writings (PE17/24). In later writings, though, its root form was √PED instead of ᴹ√PEN, as √PEN was given the new sense “lack, be without” (PE17/173; WJ/375).

Quenya [PE17/024; PE17/173] Group: Eldamo. Published by

pendë

noun. steep incline, hill side, steep incline, hillside, [ᴹQ.] (down) slope, declivity

A noun meaning “steep incline, hill side” (PE17/24) or “(down) slope, declivity” (Ety/PEN). It has the general implication of a downward slope; an upward slope would be ampendë.

Conceptual Development: In The Etymologies of the 1930s it first appeared as ᴹQ. nende “slope, hillside” derived from ᴹ√DEN “hillside, slope”, but the meaning of this root was change to ᴹ√DEN “hole; gap, passage” (Ety/DEN). Tolkien introduced a new root ᴹ√PEN(ED) with the derivative ᴹQ. pende “slope, downslope, declivity” (Ety/PEN). In later writings, though, its root form was √PED instead of ᴹ√PEN, as √PEN was given the new sense “lack, be without” (PE17/171; WJ/375).

Quenya [PE17/024; PE17/171] Group: Eldamo. Published by

penda-

verb. to slope, incline

A verb meaning “to slope, incline” derived from the root √PED (PE17/171, 173). It was a weak verb (PE17/173), probably based on the verb-like adjective form Q. penda “sloping”, since the strong forms would have collided with derivatives of √PER “half” (PE17/171).

Quenya [PE17/171; PE17/173] Group: Eldamo. Published by

penda

sloping down, inclined

penda adj. "sloping down, inclined" (PEN/PÉNED), "steeply inclined, sloping down" (PE17:24)

penda-

slope, incline

penda- vb. "slope, incline" (PE17:171, 173)

Pendi

Pendi

The word comes from Primitive Elvish kwendî (singular kwende), Root KWENE. See also pen.

Quenya [Tolkien Gateway] Published by

anto

mouth

anto (1) noun "mouth", also name of tengwa #13 (Appendix E)

anto

noun. mouth, mouth [as a thing for eating]; [ᴱQ.] jaw

The basic Quenya word for “mouth”, appearing as the name of tengwa #13 (4) in The Lord of the Rings Appendix E (LotR/1123). It is likely derived from the root √MAT “eat” from primitive ✱amtō, and hence refers to the mouth as a thing for eating. Quenya has a number of other more specialized words for the mouth, however, such as Q. for the closed mouth, Q. ópa for the mouth opening, Q. songa for the interior of the mouth and Q. náva for the entire mouth apparatus (tongue, lips and teeth) used for speech.

Conceptual Development: ᴹQ. anto “mouth” first appeared in notes on The Feanorian Alphabet from the 1940s, where it replaced ᴹQ. anta “jaws” (PE22/50 note #50). In the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, ᴱQ. anto (antu-) was itself glossed “jaw” and was based on the early root ᴱ√MATA “eat” (QL/31, 59).

yanta

bridge

yanta noun "bridge", also name of tengwa #35 (Appendix E); in the Etymologies, yanta is defined as "yoke" (YAT)

carpa

mouth

carpa ("k") (1) noun "mouth", including lips, teeth, tongue etc. (PE17:126); also used for "language", in particular the phonetic system.Cf. náva and páva.

lango

passage

lango (2) noun "passage", especially across or over an obstacle, also "neck" (PE17:92)

lanta

fall

lanta (1) noun "a fall" (DAT/DANT (TALÁT) ), also lantë.

lanta-

fall

lanta- (2) "fall" (DAT/DANT (TALÁT), Narqelion, VT45:26, VT49:54); lantar aorist tense pl. (Nam, RGEO:66); pl. pa.t. lantaner "fell" (pl.) (SD:246); lantier "they fell", a plural past tense of lanta- "fall" occurring in LR:47; read probably lantaner in LotR-style Quenya, as in SD:246. Also sg. lantië "fell" (LR:56); read likewise *lantanë? (The forms in -ier, - seem to be properly perfects.) Future tense lantuva, VT49:47. Participle lantala "falling" (with locative ending: lantalassë) in Markirya.

lantar

fall

-r plural ending used on verbs with a plural subject (VT49:48, 50, 51), e.g. lantar "fall" in Namárië (with the plural subject lassi "leaves"), or unduláver as the pl. form of undulávë "licked down, covered" (PE17:72). The ending is sometimes missing where we might expect it; for instance, the verb tarnë "stood" has multiple subjects and yet does not appear as *tarner in PE17:71.

lantë

fall

#lantë (1) noun "fall" in Noldolantë, q.v. Also lanta.

lantë

noun. fall

The word lasselanta “leaf-fall, autumn” (LotR/1107) indicate the form this word should be lanta, which is how it appears in The Etymologies. However, the alternate lassewinta (PM/376) seems to be formed with the infinitive of the verb winta- rather than a noun, so perhaps lasselanta is a similar formation from the verb lanta- “to fall”.

The form lantë, appearing in Noldolantë “Fall of the Noldor” (S/87), more strongly resembles other Quenya nouns, which more often end in -e rather than -a. The noun atalantë “collapse, downfall” is a similar formation from the related verb [ᴹQ.] atalta-, though it could also be the past formation “downfallen” of this TALAT-stem verb.

mentië

passage, journey, direction of travel

mentië noun "passage, journey, direction of travel" (PE17:13); the elements are men- "go, proceed" + tië "path, road". Not to be confused with the gerund of menta- #1.

nenda

sloping

[nenda] (2) adj. "sloping" (DEN, struck out)

nendë

slope, hillside

[nendë] (2) noun "slope, hillside" (DEN, struck out; compare VT45:9)

náva

mouth

náva ("ñ")noun "mouth", apparently not only the lips but also the inside of the mouth (VT39:13 cf. 8). Possibly, but probably not, the same element that is translated "hollow" in Návarot, q.v.

páva

mouth

páva noun "mouth" (including tongue, lips and teeth). Apparently changed by Tolkien to náva, q.v. (VT39:19)

páva

noun. mouth

songa

mouth

songa noun "mouth", in the sense of "interior cavity behind the teeth, containing tongue" (PE17:126)

talta

sloping, tilted, leaning

talta adj. "sloping, tilted, leaning"; also "incline" as noun (TALÁT)

yaltë

bridge

yaltë noun "bridge" (GL:37); rather yanta in Tolkien's later Quenya

yanta

noun. bridge

yanwë

bridge, joining, isthmus

yanwë noun "bridge, joining, isthmus" (YAT, "joining", VT49:45, 46), changed by Tolkien from yanwa (VT46:22, VT49:34)

ópa

mouth

ópa noun "mouth", in the sense of mouth-opening with lips as the edges (PE17:126)

Primitive elvish

pendā

adjective. sloping

Primitive elvish [PE17/173; WJ/375] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Telerin 

pendë

noun. Elf (as a race)

Telerin [WJ/362; WJ/375; WJ/408; WJI/Pendi] Group: Eldamo. Published by

pendia

noun. Quenya

goldolambë

noun. Quenya

Telerin [WJ/375; WJI/Goldo] Group: Eldamo. Published by

goldórin

noun. Quenya

Telerin [WJ/375; WJI/Goldo] Group: Eldamo. Published by

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!

Early Quenya

pendelot

masculine name. Pendelot

Qenya cognate of G. Penlod appearing on an early name list (PE13/104).

Early Quenya [PE13/104] Group: Eldamo. Published by

penda

noun. bridge

Early Quenya [QL/073; QL/082] Group: Eldamo. Published by

penda

adjective. *sloping

Early Quenya [PE13/159] Group: Eldamo. Published by

ó(vo)

noun. mouth

Early Quenya [PE16/136] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Qenya 

penda

adjective. sloping down, inclined

Qenya [Ety/DEN; Ety/PEN] Group: Eldamo. Published by

pende

noun. slope, downslope, declivity

Qenya [Ety/DEN; Ety/PEN; EtyAC/DEN] Group: Eldamo. Published by

anto

noun. mouth

lanta

noun. fall

Qenya [Ety/DAT; Ety/TALÁT] Group: Eldamo. Published by

noun. mouth

Qenya [Ety/PEG; PE21/38; PE21/41] Group: Eldamo. Published by

yanta

noun. bridge

Qenya [PE22/022; PE22/051] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Gnomish

gogail

noun. mouth

A noun appearing as G. gogel “mouth” in The Gnomish Grammar (GG/8) and as {gogel >} gogíl or gogail “mouth” in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s (GL/40). In the latter document, Tolkien said it was a combination of G. go- “together” and G. cail “lip”, from more archaic forms gwa-caíl, gwa-cil. An unrelated word G. mem “mouth” also appeared in Gnomish Lexicon (GL/57), perhaps related to G. beg “chin” which Tolkien connected to ᴱQ. “(closed) mouth” = “the two lips” (GL/57; QL/72).

Neo-Sindarin: I’ve used these Gnomish words as the inspiration for a neologism ᴺS. gobem “mouth”, based on the (neologism) ᴺS. pemp “lip”, where the reduction of -mp to -m finally is an irregular assimilation to the preceding voiced b: -mp > -mb > -m.

Gnomish [GG/08; GL/24; GL/40] Group: Eldamo. Published by

gogel

noun. mouth

gogìl

noun. mouth

mem

noun. mouth

tram

noun. bridge

Gnomish [GL/71; PE13/094] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Doriathrin

adhum

noun. bridge

A Doriathrin word for “bridge” appearing in the Addenda and Corrigenda to The Etymologies (EtyAC/YAT), likely a derivative of the same primitive form ᴹ✶yatmā as its cognates in other languages. An earlier deleted form iaðum may indicate Tolkien’s uncertainty over the development of initial [j] (= “y”) in Ilkorin; elsewhere the rule is that [[ilk|initial [j] vanished]].

Doriathrin [EtyAC/YAT] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Old Noldorin 

danta-

verb. fall

Old Noldorin [PE21/58] Group: Eldamo. Published by

tlāta

adjective. sloping

Old Noldorin [PE18/038] Group: Eldamo. Published by

yanme

noun. bridge

Old Noldorin [Ety/ƷEL; PE22/027] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Middle Primitive Elvish

danta-

verb. fall

Middle Primitive Elvish [PE21/58; PE21/63] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Primitive adûnaic

kalab

root. fall

A Primitive Adûnaic root gloss “fall” (SD/416) appearing as an element in the name Akallabêth (PM/158) and also most likely the basis for the verb kalab- “to fall (down)”.

Primitive adûnaic [PM/158; SD/416] Group: Eldamo. Published by