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Q. n. “(closed) mouth; lip” (Category: Mouth)

Q. , n. “(closed) mouth; the two lips [as dual], ⚠️lip” (Category: Mouth)

A word for the (closed) mouth (PE21/70; PE17/126) which Tolkien sometimes used as “lip” (VT39/9; VT47/12); see below. Its dual form peu referred to “the two lips, the mouth-opening” (VT39/9), as opposed to a single lip which seems to be Q. pempë (PE17/126).

Conceptual Development: This word dates all the way back to the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, where Tolkien gave ᴱQ. “the two lips, the (closed) mouth” from primitive ᴱ√ (QL/72). In the contemporaneous Gnomish Lexicon, ᴱQ. was simply glossed “mouth” and was connected to G. beg “chin” (GL/22), indicating that the early root might actually have been *ᴱ√ since primitive initial voiced stops were unvoiced in Early Qenya.

ᴱQ. “mouth” reappeared in a list of body parts from the 1920s (PE14/117), and ᴹQ. “mouth” appeared again in the Declension of Nouns from the early 1930s as an example of vocalic monosyllabic noun from primitive ✶ (PE21/38); at the beginning of this document the primitive form was glossed “mouth, lips” (PE21/1). In The Etymologies of the 1930s it was ᴹQ. “mouth” derived from the root ᴹ√PEG (Ety/PEG); this entry had a difficult-to-read word inserted before its gloss, possibly “outer”, so perhaps the meaning was revised to “outer mouth” (EtyAC/PEG).

In the 1950s and 60s, the word was generally derived from √PEÑ (PE19/102; PE21/70; VT39/11). In notes associated with the Quendi and Eldar essay of 1959-60, Q. was glossed “lip” and its dual peu referred to “the two lips, the mouth-opening” (VT39/9). In 1964 notes on parts of the mouth Tolkien glossed as “the closed mouth” (PE17/126), but in notes from 1968 it was again glossed “lip” (VT47/12). In notes on monosyllabic nouns from this period Tolkien said ✶ “lip” was a primitive monosyllabic vocalic noun, but that it was reduplicated to ✶pē̆pe (VT47/35). In green-ink revision to Outline of Phonology from around 1970, Tolkien again affirmed the original primitive form was pe(ñ), though the ñ was lost very early (PE19/102 note #102).

Neo-Quenya: For purposes of Neo-Quenya, I would use as a word meaning “mouth”, more specifically for “closed mouth” as opposed to the general word for mouth: Q. anto. For a single “lip” I would use pempë, but I would use peu as a dual form indicating both lips, whether open or closed. All these words are in general use, but is also used as a technical term in linguistic discussions for the close mouth in formation of consonants such as voiced and voiceless stops.

References ✧ PE17/126; PE19/102; PE21/70; VT39/9, 11; VT47/12

Glosses

Variations

Related

Inflections

peu dual “the two lips, the mouth-opening” ✧ VT39/9
peu dual   ✧ VT39/11

Element In

Derivations

Phonetic Developments

peñ > [peŋ] > [peɣ] > [pē] ✧ PE19/102
peñe > [peŋe] > [peɣe] > [pē] ✧ VT39/11
peñū > peu [peŋū] > [peɣū] > [peu] ✧ VT39/11
> [pē] ✧ VT47/12

ᴹQ. n. “mouth” (Category: Mouth)

References ✧ Ety/PEG; PE21/38, 41

Glosses

Variations

Inflections

pello ablative ✧ PE21/38
pēlo ablative ✧ PE21/38
pellut ablative dual ✧ PE21/38
pélut ablative dual ✧ PE21/38
accusative ✧ PE21/38
pēt accusative dual ✧ PE21/38
penta allative ✧ PE21/38
pēta allative ✧ PE21/38
pentau allative dual ✧ PE21/38
pétau allative dual ✧ PE21/38
pēr dative ✧ PE21/38
peu dative dual ✧ PE21/38
peo genitive ✧ PE21/38
pehta genitive dual ✧ PE21/38
pēnen instrumental ✧ PE21/38
pémet instrumental dual ✧ PE21/38
pesse locative ✧ PE21/38
pesset locative dual ✧ PE21/38
pē-n nominative ✧ PE21/38
pent nominative dual ✧ PE21/38
pélin nominative plural ✧ PE21/38
péva possessive ✧ PE21/38
pendon similative ✧ PE21/38
pénon similative ✧ PE21/38

Derivations

Phonetic Developments

ᴹ√PEG > [pege] > [peɣe] > [pē] ✧ Ety/PEG
ᴹ✶pē- > [pē] ✧ PE21/38

ᴱQ. n. “the two lips, the (closed) mouth” (Category: Lip)

References ✧ GL/22; PE14/117; QL/72

Glosses

Variations

Cognates

Derivations

Phonetic Developments

ᴱ√ > [bē] > [pē] ✧ QL/72