Q. #ric-¹ v. (basic-verb) “to try, put forth effort, strive, endeavour” (Category: to Try)
A verb for “to try” based on the root √RIK “put forth effort, strive, endeavour” in notes from around 1967 where Tolkien explored the Quenya equivalent of “try harder” = á rike amríkie (PE17/93-94). In those notes he said:
... this apparently simple phrase is in fact very idiomatic, and requires a context. Try retains many divergent meanings owing to its derivation from a word originally meaning “sift” > examine, judge, test, whence later in one branch > make tentative motions, trial efforts > attempt > endeavour, make efforts to a given end. Here the last: “put forth effort”, is usually the meaning (PE17/93).
The verb form rike appeared in what seems to be in a draft to these 1967 notes along with a variant rihta, both derivatives of √RIK “strive” (PE17/167).
Neo-Quenya: Based on the above, I would use ric- “try” mainly in the sense “strive, put for effort”. For purposes of Neo-Quenya, I would use nev- for the sense “try” = “*seek opportunity, experiment”, a verb that appeared in the draft notes mentioned above (PE17/167); see that entry for discussion. More precisely, I would use ric- “try” when uncertain of whether I was capable of performing the action and it needed concerted effort, where I would use nev- “try” when I believed I was capable, but was uncertain what the result of the action will be.
References ✧ PE17/93-94, 167
Variations
Related
Inflections
rike | aorist | “try” | ✧ PE17/93 |
rike | aorist | ✧ PE17/167 | |
rikir | aorist plural | “try” | ✧ PE17/94 |
am(a)ríkie | intensive gerund | “with more/additional effort” | ✧ PE17/94 |
Element In
Cognates
Derivations
Phonetic Developments
√RIK > rike | [rik-] | ✧ PE17/93 |
√RIK > rike | [rik-] | ✧ PE17/167 |