A word glossed {“nephew” >>} “son” in an isolated entry of the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s with stem form fiond- (QL/37). The same word appeared unglossed under the early root ᴱ√SUẈU where it was derived from primitive ᴱ✶þẉ-iı̯on-d (QL/87).
Early Quenya
yondo
noun. son, male descendant, (great) grandson
Cognates
- G. go- “son of” ✧ GL/40; GL/41
Derivations
- ᴱ√YO(NO)
Element in
Variations
- yô/yondo ✧ GL/40 (
yô/yondo); GL/41 (yô/yondo)
vondo
noun. son
Cognates
- G. bo(n) “son” ✧ GL/23; LT2A/bo
Derivations
- ᴱ√VO(NO) “son”
Variations
- vô ✧ GL/23; LT2A/bo
yó
noun. son
Derivations
- ᴱ√YO(NO)
Element in
Variations
- yô ✧ LT2A/go; LT2A/Indorion (yô)
- Yon ✧ QL/043
- yon ✧ QL/087 (yon)
- Y̯ó ✧ QL/106 (Y̯ó)
yon
noun. son
ion
noun. son
Cognates
- En. gó “son” ✧ PE13/144
Derivations
- ᴱ√YO(NO) ✧ PE13/144
fion
noun. son
Derivations
- ᴱ✶þẉ-iı̯on-d ✧ QL/087
- ᴱ√SUẈU “*feminine patronymic” ✧ QL/087
Element in
- Eq. Fionwe ✧ LT1A/Fionwë; QL/038
Phonetic Developments
Development Stages Sources ᴱ✶þẉ-iı̯on-d > fion [θwijond] > [swijond] > [swiond] > [fiond] > [fion] ✧ QL/087 Variations
- Fion ✧ LT1A/Fionwë; QL/038
hilmo
noun. son
hilu
noun. son
A word for “son” in the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s with variants hilu and hilmo under the early root ᴱ√HILI (QL/40), both variants also appearing in the Poetic and Mythological Words of Eldarissa (PME/40).
Derivations
- ᴱ√HILI “*youth, offspring” ✧ QL/040
Phonetic Developments
Development Stages Sources ᴱ√HIL > hilu [xilū] > [xilu] > [hilu] ✧ QL/040 Variations
- hilmo ✧ PME/040; QL/040; QL/106
vô
noun. son
In the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, ᴱQ. Ion was the “mystic name of God, 2nd Person of Blessed Trinity”, that is the “Son” in the “Father, Son, Holy Ghost” trinity (QL/43). In that document yon or yond- was given in a couple of places as (archaic?) words for “son” (QL/43, 106). In Early Noldorin Word-lists of the 1920s, Tolkien gave ion as the equivalent of ᴱN. gó “son”, along with a plural form yondi (PE13/113). However, in the English-Qenya Dictionary Tolkien said yondi was an irregular plural form of ᴱQ. yondo “son” (PE15/77), and this is the form he typically used in later writings.