Q. Uinen f.

Q. Uinen, f.

A Maia, Lady of the Seas (S/30). The meaning of this name is unclear, and it is probably adapted from her Valarin title like the name of her spouse Ossë (WJ/404).

Conceptual Development: The earliest form of her name was ᴱQ. Ówen, from the “Poetical and Mythological Words of Eldarissa” (PME/70). A similar word ᴱQ. ówen “mermaid” appeared in the Qenya Lexicon as a derivative of the root ᴱ√’O’O “Sea” (QL/70). This name also appeared the earliest Lost Tales, but was quickly replaced ᴱQ. Ónen (LT1/58, 61). At this early stage, G. Uinen was the Gnomish equivalent of her name (GL/74), but Uinen gradually supplanted Ónen in the writing of the Lost Tales (LT1/121, 130 note #6).

In Silmarillion drafts from the 1930s, her name in Quenya was also ᴹQ. Uinen, and this name appeared in The Etymologies alongside N. Uinen as a combination of the roots ᴹ√UY “seaweed” and ᴹ√NEN “water” (Ety/UY, NEN). At this stage, the genitive form of her name was given as ᴹQ. Uinenden (Ety/UY) implying a stem form of Uinend-, but Tolkien may have abandoned this form, as evidenced by the later name Q. Uinéniel “Daughter of Uinen” (Uinen + -iel). The idea that her name was derived from Valarin did not emerge until the Quendi and Eldar essay from 1959-60 (WJ/404).

References ✧ LT1/63, 79; MRI; SA/nen; SI; UTI; WJ/404; WJI

Elements

nén “water” ✧ SA/nen (nen)

Element In


ᴹQ. Uinen (Uinend-) f.

See Q. Uinen for discussion.

References ✧ Ety/NEN, UY; LRI; SMI

Variations

Inflections

Uinenden genitive ✧ Ety/UY

Elements

ᴹ√UY ✧ Ety/NEN; Ety/UY
ᴹ√NEN ✧ Ety/NEN; Ety/UY

Cognates


ᴱQ. Ónen f.

See Q. Uinen for discussion.

References ✧ LT1/61, 63, 79, 130; LT1A/Ónen; LT1I/Ónen, Uinen; LT2/51; LT2I/Oinen, Ónen, Uinen; PE14/14; PE15/8; PME/70, 97

Variations

Related

Changes

Elements

ówen “merchild, mermaid” ✧ PME/70 (ōwen)

Element In

Cognates

Derivations