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Q. -ima suf. “-able, possibility” (Category: Can, May)

Q. -ima, suf. “-able, [ᴹQ.] -ible, able to be done, [ᴱQ.] possible; [with short base vowel] *having a (strong) nature of” (Category: Can, May)

An adjective suffix. When used with verbs, it functions like the English suffix “-able, -ible”: cénima “visible”, mátima “edible”, nótima “countable”. When used in this way, the base vowel of the verb is also lengthened, as opposed to when -ima is used as an ordinary adjective suffix without lengthening:

Only the adjs. in -ima found with long stem vowel were adjs. of possibility. -ima was frequently used with stems (verbal, adj[ectival] or nominal) with a short vowel, and the sense possessing to a high degree (at all times and by nature) the property mention[ed]. So kalima “luminous (by nature always)”, vanima “beautiful”, norima “running, swiftly a course[?]”, kelima “fluent”, istima “wise (in sense of knowing much), knowledgeable, very well informed”, melima “loving, very affectionate” — but lamélima “unlovable” (PE22/156).

In most cases these two functions for the suffix -ima can be distinguished by the presense or absence of a long vowel, meaning “-able” (long vowel) or “having a [strong] nature of” (short vowel) respectively. But with many weak verbs, lengthening was not possible and the a was retained, as with tultaima “*fetchable, summonable” (PE22/156). With other a-stem verbs (a-verbs, formative verbs), the suffix -ima replaced the final vowel, as with nútima “*lowerable” from the verb núta- “lower” (PE22/156).

When used with intransitive verbs, the sense “-able” was not appropriate, so the suffix had its other meaning “having a (strong) nature of”:

When formed from intransitive stems as kalima “luminous” [from the verb cal- “shine”] they differed from the [active] verbal participles in -ila (a) as being more intensive, (b) as being always aorist[?] and without special reference to a present or particular occasion (PE22/155).

Based on the example calima “luminous”, there was no vowel lengthening when the suffix was used with intransitive verbs.

Conceptual Development: As a general adjective suffix, ᴱQ. -ima dates all the way back to the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, but its first clear mention as a verbal suffix of possibility is in Qenya Verb Forms written in the 1920s where it was glossed “-able, possible”, including an example indicating it was associated with vowel-lengthening: tūlima (PE14/33).

In the Quenya Verbal System (QVS) of 1948 the suffix could use consonant-doubling as an alternate method of strengthening the stem: ᴹQ. mattima “edible” or ᴹQ. qettima “utterable” (PE22/111). In QVS it took the form -alima with weak verbs: ᴹQ. istalima “knowable” or ᴹQ. ortalima “able to be raised” (PE22/111). In Common Eldarin: Verb Structure (EVS2) of the early 1950s Tolkien said it sometimes took the form -tima, as in mastima < ✶matˢtimā (PE22/137). But elsewhere it was only used with vowel lengthening when functioning as a suffix of possibility.

Tolkien also discussed the -ima suffix at length in Late Notes on Verb Structure (LVS) written in 1969 (PE22/155-156). Based on the example tultaima from LVS, I believe weak verbs in Tolkien’s later system simply appended -ima to the verb stem. Presumably u-stem verbs would be similar, though we have no examples. With a-verbs (and probably formatives as well) the final a in the verb was replaced, as with the nútima example noted above.

References ✧ PE17/68, 112; PE22/137, 153-156; WJ/387

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Phonetic Developments

imā > ima [-imā] > [-ima] ✧ PE22/137

ᴹQ. -ima suf. “able to be done, -able, -ible” (Category: Can, May)

See Q. -ima for discussion.

References ✧ Ety/IS; PE22/111

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Element In


ᴱQ. -ima suf. “-able, possible” (Category: Can, May)

See Q. -ima for discussion.

References ✧ PE14/33; QL/37-38, 45, 48, 56-57, 59, 76, 78-79, 82, 84, 91, 93, 96-97, 99, 102

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