suff. & verbal stem (quasi-participle in aorist mode) & continuative part. (generally) idle. >> ú-, úgarol
Sindarin
úgar
verb. he does not do
úgarol
suffix. idle
úgarth
noun. trespass, *(lit.) misdeed
úgarol
adjective. idling, not now doing or making
A word for “idling, not now doing or making”, a negation of the active participle carol “doing, making” (adjectival) of the verb car- “do, make” (PE17/144).
úgarth
noun. bad deed, sin, trespass
úgarth
sin
*úgarth (ill deed), pl. úgerth (VT44:23)
úgarth
ill deed
*úgarth (sin), pl. úgerth (VT44:23)
úgarth
ill deed
*úgarth (sin), pl. úgerth (VT44:23)
úgarth
ill deed
(sin), pl. úgerth (VT44:23)
úgarth
sin
(ill deed), pl. úgerth (VT44:23)
úgarth
ill deed
(sin), pl. úgerth (VT44:23)
carth
noun. deed
Sindarin noun for a “deed”, attested only in its lenited plural form gerth within the word úgarth “trespass” (VT44/28), which probably more literally means “✱misdeed”. This word is not completely compatible with its Quenya cognate Q. carda “deed” from primitive ✶kardā, which in Sindarin should produce ✱cardh. Perhaps the Sindarin word had a slightly different primitive form ✱✶kartā. The expect form cardh might appear as an element in the variant form athragarð of S. athragared “interaction”.
Conceptual Development: Perhaps the earliest precursors of this word are G. cara “deed, act” and G. carm “act, deed, exploit” in the Gnomish Lexicon from the 1910s (GL/25; PE13/111), the latter a cognate of contemporaneous ᴱQ. karma “shape, fashion; act, deed” (QL/45). Early Noldorin word lists from the 1920s had ᴱN. carbh “deed” (PE13/140), reflecting Tolkien’s changing conception of the phonetic development of final -m in Noldorin. In The Etymologies from the 1930s, the word appeared as N. carth or carð “deed” (cardh), but these forms were rejected and replaced by N. car(ð) “building” when Tolkien decided the root meant only “make, build” and not “do” (Ety/KAR), a decision he later reversed.
car-
verb. to do, make
Car- is the Sindarin verb for “do, make”, derived from the root √KAR of the same meaning. Tolkien often used it for examples of verb inflections in his writings.
Conceptual Development: The earliest iteration of this verb was G. {car- >>} cartha- “make, finish” in the Gnomish Lexicon of the 1910s with past tense côri (GL/25), reappearing as cartha- “to finish” in the Gnomish Lexicon Slips modifying that document with past tense cair- or cawr- (PE13/111). A set of rough verb forms caron, {cur}, côr, {carn}, crantha, cor and cranthi appear in the margin of a page of the Early Noldorin Grammar, which the editors suggested might be related to the (unglossed and rejected) sentence ᴱN. on gós i·bhelon ar cranthi gwaist ’worin o nomad othra, perhaps meaning “✱he made everyone aware of your sinking” (PE13/128 and note #76).
In the Early Noldorin Dictionary, also from the 1920s, Tolkien had ᴱN. cara- “to make, do, perform, act (trans. and absolute)” with a new past form agor (PE13/161). Hints of the verb N. car- can be found in The Etymologies of the 1930s in words like N. ceredir “doer, maker” and N. osgar “cut round, amputate” (Ety/DER, OS). The verb appeared regularly in conjugation charts and sentences Tolkien’s later writings of the 1950s and 60s (VT50/22; PE17/132).
carn
noun. deed
cardh
deed
cardh (i gardh, o chardh), pl. cerdh (i cherdh). Note: cardh may also mean "house, building".
cardh
deed
(i gardh, o chardh), pl. cerdh (i cherdh). Note: cardh may also mean "house, building".
_ v. _he does not do (make). >> ú-