Primitive elvish
thindi
adjective. grey
Changes
thinide→ thinida ✧ PE17/141thinidi→ thĭndĭ ✧ PE17/141Derivations
- √THIN “*grey” ✧ WJ/384
Derivatives
Variations
- þindĭ- ✧ PE17/140
- thindi- ✧ PE17/141
- thĭndĭ ✧ PE17/141
- thinide ✧ PE17/141 (
thinide)- thinidi ✧ PE17/141 (
thinidi)- thini ✧ PE21/81
thini
adjective. grey
thindā
adjective. grey
Derivations
- √THIN “*grey”
Derivatives
Variations
- þindā ✧ PE17/072
- thinida ✧ PE17/141
stin
root. grey
mith
root. grey
Derivatives
Variations
- MIÞ ✧ PE17/072
Tolkien introduced the root ᴹ√MITH in The Etymologies of the 1930s as a blending of ᴹ√MIS “✱wet” and ᴹ√KHITH “mist, fog”, with the derivative N. mith “white fog, wet mist” as in N. Mithrim “✱Mist Lake” (Ety/MITH, RINGI; EtyAC/MITH). As a later addition to this entry Tolkien wrote the adjective N. mith “grey”, and that was the more common use of this word in Tolkien’s later writings. In a 1955 letter to David Masson Tolkien specified that “usage suggests that MIÞ- is paler and whiter, a luminous grey” (PE17/72).