Sindarin 

rúmil

masculine name. Rúmil

An Elf of Lórien (LotR/343), most likely his name was an adaptation of Q. Rúmil.

Conceptual Development: In Lord of the Rings drafts from the 1940s, this character was first named N. Rhimbron >> Romrin >> Rhomrin (TI/236).

Sindarin [LotRI/Rúmil; TII/Rhimbron] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Quenya 

Rúmil

rúmil

Rúmil masc. name, genitive Rúmilo (WJ:398)

rúmil

masculine name. of Rúmil

The famous Elvish sage of Tirion, creator of the first system of letters, the Sarati (S/63, WJ/396). He was also the author of the Ainulindalë (MR/8) and other scholarly works. The meaning of his name is unclear.

Conceptual Development: This character first appeared in the earliest Lost Tales, where ᴱQ. Rúmil was the door warden of Mar Vanwa Tyaliéva (LT1/46-7), but even at this early stage he was identified as a sage (LT1/65). In Silmarillion drafts and notes from the 1930s, ᴹQ. Rúmil was described as the Elf-sage of Valinor and he wrote the first part of the Annals of Valinor as well as the Ainulindalë (LR/116, 156). He also wrote the linguistic works on which the Lhammas was based (LR/167).

J.R.R. Tolkien never explained the etymology of this name, but Christopher suggested that the earliest forms of this name might have been related to G. rûm “secret, mystery” (LT1A/Rúmil). A similar name Rumel appeared in a list of “ancient compounds” in some linguistic notes from the early 1930s (PE21/33), but without any further indication of its meaning.

Quenya [MRI/Rúmil; PMI/Rúmil; SI/Rúmil; WJ/398; WJI/Rúmil] Group: Eldamo. Published by

-o

of goodness

-o (1) genitive ending, as in Altariello, Oromëo, Elenna-nórëo, Rithil-Anamo, Rúmilo, Lestanórëo, neldëo, omentielvo, sindiëo, Valinórëo, veryanwesto, q.v. In words ending in -a, the genitive ending replaces this final vowel, hence atto, Ráno, Vardo, vorondo as the genitive forms of atta, Rána, Varda, voronda (q.v.) Following a noun in -, the ending can have the longer form -no, e.g. *máriéno "of goodness" (PE17:59, but contrast sindiëo "of greyness" in PE17:72). Where the word ends in -o already, the genitive is not distinct in form, e.g. ciryamo (q.v.) = "mariner" or "mariners". Pl. -ion and -ron, q.v.; dual -to (but possibly -uo in the case of nouns that have nominative dual forms in -u rather than -t). The Quenya genitive describes source, origin or former ownership rather than current ownership (which is rather covered by the possessive-adjectival case in -va). The ending -o may also take on an ablativic sense, "from", as in Oiolossëo "from (Mount) Oiolossë" (Nam), sio "hence" (VT49:18). In some of Tolkiens earlier material, the genitive ending was -n rather than -o, cf. such a revision as Yénië Valinóren "Annals of Valinor" becoming Yénië Valinórëo (MR:200).


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

rúmil

masculine name. Rúmil

Early Quenya [LT1A/Rúmil; LT1I/Rúmil; LT2I/Rúmil] Group: Eldamo. Published by

Qenya 

rúmil

masculine name. Rúmil

Qenya [LRI/Rúmil; PE21/33; SMI/Rúmil; TII/Rúmil] Group: Eldamo. Published by