Gnomish Words
- -a suf. “genitive suffix”
- a-¹ pron. “it, they; 3rd-person pronoun”
- a¹ prep. “from”
- a² prep. “of” see a(n)
- a-² pref. “?”
- abair n. “victory”
- abod adv. “again; in return, in exchange; back”
- abont adv. “back; backwards”
- ach adv. “too, *excessively”
- âch n. “waterfall” see acha
- acha n. “waterfall”
- a(d) prep. “into”
- ada n. “daddy” see (n)ada
- adhin adv. “once (up a time), long ago, formerly” see dîn
- adhwen n. “approach, avenue”
- adi n. “daddy” see (n)ada
- †ador n. “father”
- adr prep. and adv. “across, athwart”
- adr(a) adj. “lying athwart; situated on far side”
- adron adv. “further, beyond, over; on other side”
- adros n. “crossing, ford”
- adrum n. “hammer” see odrum
- agla n. “flash”
- aglar n. “glory”
- aglar(i)ol adj. “glorious”
- †aglath n. “glory”
- aglen n. “flash” see agla
- agra adj. “extreme, vehement, excessive”
- agraith n. “contempt” see agrech
- agrech n. “contempt”
- agrectha- v. “to despise, contemn”
- agrectharol adj. “despicable, contemptible”
- agrecthion adj. “despised”
- agros adv. “excessively, too; excess”
- ai interj. “oh!”
- aibin n. “cherry (tree)”
- aibios n. “cherry (tree)” see aibin
- aidha n. “nest”
- aidlan n. “today” see ain²
- aidra- v. “to expiate”
- aidros n. “expiation”
- aigli n. “bird”
- aigos n. “pine-tree”
- aiguis n. “pine-tree” see aigos
- ail n. “lake, pool”
- ailion n. “lake, pool”
- ain¹ n. “god”
- ain² n. “today”
- aina¹ adj. “small”
- aina² n. “today” see ain²
- ainan n. “today” see aindana
- aindana n. “today”
- aindanathon adj. “today”
- ainil n. “(female) god”
- ainog n. “*(male) god” see ainos
- ainos n. “(male) god”
- ainuil n. “*(female) god” see ainil
- †air(in) adj. “holy, sacred”
- ais n. “knowledge, wisdom”
- aisc adj. and n. “sharp, bitter; sharp edge of a blade”
- aist n. “reverence, awe”
- aista- v. “to revere”
- aistog adj. “holy, revered, awful”
- aith¹ n. “thorn”
- aith² n. “sword”
- aitha- v. “to prick, sting”
- aitheb adj. “sharp, piercing”
- †aithi n. “sword” see aith²
- †aith(i)or n. “warrior, swordsman”
- aithl n. “spring”
- aithla- v. “to spring (from), issue forth, bubble up”
- aithog adj. “thorny”
- aithos n. “thorn bush”
- aithr n. “thorn, †sword”
- aithra adj. “piercing, sharp; thorny”
- aithrog n. “warrior”
- aithron n. “warrior, †swordsman”
- aithweg n. “warrior”
- aithwen n. “sword” see aith²
- aithyl n. “spring” see aithl
- aivin n. “rookery, colony of birds” see aivor
- aivor n. “rookery, colony of birds”
- âl n. “wood (material)”
- alaf n. “broad of the back” see alm
- alan n. “shoulder”
- alch(ar) n. “shrine, temple” see alc(hor)
- alcharn adj. “of wood, wooden” see âlog
- alc(hor) n. “shrine, fane, temple”
- alepthog adj. “fingered, having fingers”
- alewthion adj. “having fingers”
- alf n. “swan” see alfa
- alfa n. “swan”
- alfuil(in) n. “swan”
- alm n. “back (from shoulder to shoulder), shoulders”
- alm(oth) n. “forest”
- âlog adj. “of wood, wooden”
- alos n. “forest”
- altha n. “shoot, sprig, scion, sapling”
- altha- v. “to shoot up, grow (high)”
- alw(eg) adj. “lofty (of living things, trees, men)”
- †alwen n. “tree”
- am¹ adv. “up, upwards, towards head of, above”
- am² n. “breast, front (chest)”
- amabwed adj. “having hands”
- amaith n. “mother” see amil
- am(b)ros(t) n. “dawn”
- ami n. “mummy” see (m)ami
- amil n. “mother”
- amlad n. “surface”
- ammogrint adj. “red-breast[ed]”
- ammos n. “byrne, hauberk, cuirass”
- amon¹ n. “hill, mount, steep slope”
- amon² adv. “uphill, against stream”
- amosgarn n. “robin”
- amoth n. “breast” see am²
- amra- v. “to go up and down; live in the mountains; roam, wander”
- amrad n. “nomand, wanderer (f.)” see amraith
- amraith n. “nomand, wanderer (f.)”
- amrint n. “lark”
- amrod adj. “wandering, living in wilds”
- amrog n. “nomand, wanderer”
- amrog-dorn n. “brown wanderer, gipsy”
- amrost n. “dawn” see am(b)ros(t)
- a(n) prep. “of”
- an¹ n. “person, -body, one, anyone, someone, they; creature”
- ang n. “iron”
- angrin adj. “of iron, iron”
- ann n. “door” see anna
- anna n. “door, opening”
- annai adv. “far away”
- annor(in) adj. “lofty”
- annuir adj. “lofty” see annor(in)
- anos n. “man (fullgrown), warrior”
- anoth n. “†manhood; man (fullgrown), warrior”
- anothrin adj. “adult (of men), fullgrown; manly”
- ant n. “cheek; face”
- antha- v. “to give”
- antha adj. “upper”
- anthor(in) adj. “lofty (of mountains)”
- anthos adv. “up, above”
- anthum prep. “upwards, cg. onto”
- ar- pref. “beside, along with, compared with”
- ar¹ prep. “at; to, towards”
- ar² conj. “and, too, besides”
- arc adj. “fierce, harsh, ill tempered; awkward, difficult”
- arch adj. “fierce, harsh; awkward, difficult” see arc
- archod n. “difficulty”
- archos n. “savagery, evil temper”
- archuis n. “evil temper” see archos
- arf adj. “barren, dry, desert” see arp
- argulthion adj. “equal, equivalent”
- arin(g) n. “kiln”
- armin n. “desert, waste”
- arn n. “son”
- arog adj. “swift, rushing, torrential”
- arp adj. “barren, dry, desert”
- art adv. “beside, along side of”
- artha- v. “to approach”
- artha prep. “alongside (of)”
- arthaid- v. “to join”
- arthi adv. “also, as well, besides, too”
- arwad n. “apple tree”
- asc¹ n. “water”
- asc² n. “bone; stone of fruit” see asg
- asg n. “bone; stone of fruit”
- ath pron. “they, 3rd pl. pronoun” see atha¹
- atha¹ pron. “they, 3rd pl. pronoun”
- atha² num. card. “two”
- athla adv. “twice”
- athron adj. “second, other”
- athru adj. “secondly, once more, again”
- athwi adj. “both”
- auba n. “shout”
- augla n. “ray of sunlight, sunbeam”
- auglas n. “bright sunshine”
- auglos n. “bright sunshine” see auglas
- áugwila adj. “sunny, sunlit”
- aul adv. “ill, badly”
- aulin adj. “wrong”
- aur(a) n. “Sun”
- aurin adj. “made (by craft of hand), wrought, fashioned”
- aurost n. “dawn” see haurost
- ausin adj. and n. “rich; fortune”
- ausirol n. “fortune”
- aus(s)aith n. “avarice” see avosaith
- aust n. “summer”
- auth n. “sunshine, warmth; noontide”
- authmadri n. “midday meal”
- authmeg n. “midday, high noon”
- avas n. “wealth; luck” see avos
- avasaith n. “avarice, greed of gold” see avosaith
- avin prep. “into”
- -(a)vlid suf. “less”
- avos n. “wealth, fortune, prosperity; luck”
- avosaith n. “avarice, money-greed, greed of gold”
- awl adj. “*lofty” see alw(eg)
- bâ adv. “away, off”
- ba prep. “in”
- bab- v. “to drink, quaff”
- bâb n. “father”
- baba n. “mummy, mamma” see babi
- babi n. “mummy, mamma”
- bacha n. “jacket, coat”
- bactha- v. “to walk”
- bactha n. “leg”
- bad- v. “to travel”
- bad¹ n. “building, outhouse, shed”
- bad² n. “way, path”
- bada- v. “to build”
- badweg n. “traveller; pedlar”
- bag- v. “to sell, trade”
- bageth n. “market”
- bagri n. “wares”
- bagron n. “trader”
- baidha- v. “to clothe”
- bail n. “sheath, case, cover; pod”
- bain adj. “clad”
- baith¹ n. “garment”
- baith² n. “way, road, journey”
- baithri n. “clothes, clothing”
- bâl adj. “worthy, important; great, mighty”
- bal [mb-] n. “anguish, pain; evilness”
- balc adj. “cruel, evil”
- bald adj. “*worthy” see bâl
- †baldrin adj. “mighty”
- balt adj. “rid, soluit, free”
- Ban¹ n. “god, one of the Valar”
- banc n. “trade”
- band n. “hell”
- bandra adv. “away, gone, departed, lost”
- bang n. “staff”
- bant n. “wall”
- baptha- v. “to feed; to take sup of”
- -bar suf. “dweller; home, -ham”
- bar [mb-] n. “home, dwelling”
- bara [mb-] n. “home, cottage”
- barai [mb-] adv. “at home, home” see barthi
- barant [mb-] adv. “homewards, home” see barod
- baravlid [mb-] adj. “homeless”
- barc n. “dread, terror”
- barchol adj. “terrible, awful”
- bardha n. “realm”
- bardha- v. “to rule, reign”
- barn [mb-] adj. “tilled, inhabited”
- bar(n)a- [mb-] v. “to dwell in (a land), till (land)”
- barod [mb-] adv. “homewards, home”
- barog [mb-] adv. “from home, out, away, abroad” see baron¹
- baron¹ [mb-] adv. “from home, out, away, abroad”
- baron² [mb-] adj. “tilled, inhabited” see barn
- baros [mb-] n. “hamlet”
- bart¹ n. “change”
- bart² n. “*fate” see mart(os)
- bartha- v. “to change, exchange, alter”
- barthi [mb-] adv. “at home, home”
- barwen [mb-] n. “homestead”
- bas- [mb-] v. “to bake”
- basbos n. “splash”
- basbotha- v. “to splash”
- basca- v. “to flap” see basga-
- bascovas n. “flapping and beating (especially of wings)”
- basga- v. “to flap”
- basgorn [mb-] n. “loaf (of bread)”
- bass n. “wing, pinion”
- bast [mb-] n. “bread”
- baul n. “body, trunk”
- baur [mb-] n. “house”
- beb adv. “[unglossed]”
- (be)bilfir n. “conscience”
- bectha n. “tip; chin”
- bedhgad n. “wedlock”
- bedhin adj. “wedded, married”
- †bedhiod n. “wedlock”
- bedhren n. “brother in law, kinsman by marriage”
- bedhres n. “sister in law, *kinswoman by marriage”
- bedhri n. “wedding”
- †bedhril n. “wife”
- bedhron n. “husband”
- †bedhwen n. “matrimony”
- beg n. “chin”
- begl n. “beard”
- belectha- v. “to extol, magnify”
- beleg adj. “mighty, great”
- beleth(os) n. “144, a gross; a great number”
- belin adj. “expanded, unrolled, unfurled, set (of sails)”
- belon n. “sail”
- beltha- v. “to open out (transitive), expand, unroll, set sail”
- belu- v. “to unroll, unfurl (intransitively), belly (of sails), swell”
- belwa- v. “to unroll, unfurl (intransitively), belly (of sails), swell” see belu-
- benc n. “small boat” see bent
- benin adj. “shapely, pretty”
- benli n. “a pretty”
- †benn¹ n. “husband”
- benn² n. “shape, cut, fashion, shapeliness”
- benna- v. “to wed”
- bent n. “small boat”
- bentha- v. “to cut, fashion, shape”
- benthi adj. “pretty”
- benwed adj. “shapely, pretty” see benin
- besgad n. “wedlock” see bedhgad
- bess n. “wife”
- bi prep. “in”
- bil n. “bird”
- bilin(c) n. “small bird, sparrow”
- biltha- v. “to flutter, flit”
- bin prep. “into”
- bir prep. “in, within, inside”
- bith n. “juice, sap”
- bladwen n. “plain”
- blaith n. “spirit”
- blant adj. “flat, open, expansive, candid, blunt (of words)”
- blantos n. “sycamore”
- blath n. “floor”
- blectha n. “a flame”
- blectha- v. “to flash”
- bleg n. “a flame”
- blenc adj. “brilliant”
- blencha- v. “to flash” see blectha-
- bless [mb-] n. “grace, kindness, good feeling”
- blethrin [mb-] adj. “gracious, kind”
- blid- v. “to free, rid”
- blith n. “air, breeze, zephyr”
- bloss [mb-] n. “wheat”
- bo- pref. “son of”
- bod adv. “behind, back, of time ago, ‘a while back’”
- bod- pref. “back, again; un- (= backwards)”
- bodra adj. “back(ward), hinder, rear”
- bodra- v. “to hinder, delay, tarry”
- bodron adv. “behind, further back”
- bodruith n. “revenge”
- bodruithog adj. “thirsting for vengeance (for a particular act)”
- bodruithol adj. “vengeful (by nature)”
- bon- pref. “son of” see bo-
- bo(n) n. “son”
- bont adv. “back(wards)”
- bôr n. “descendant”
- bóra adv. “always, ever, continuously”
- bordd n. “fireplace”
- born n. “age, great period”
- botheb- v. “to untie, undo, unloose”
- bothli [mb-] n. “oven”
- brach n. “shawl, plaid, wrap”
- bractha- v. “to refresh; to revive, arouse, awaken”
- brada n. “wain, waggon, cart”
- brag adj. “fresh”
- brageth n. “freshness”
- braitha- v. “to wrap, swathe”
- branc n. “bow (for shooting)” see brant²
- brand n. “hall” see †brann
- †brann n. “dwelling, hall”
- brant¹ [mb-] adj. “cooked, done; overdone”
- brant² n. “bow (for shooting)”
- branta n. “bow (for shooting)” see brant²
- brantha- v. “to scorch”
- brath- v. “to cook”
- brid- v. “[unglossed]”
- bridh(n)ir n. “queen, princess”
- bridhon n. “king, prince”
- bridhweg n. “liege (m.)”
- bridhwig n. “liege (f.)”
- bridol adj. “changing, varying, variable”
- brig- v. “to fear, be afraid of”
- brigla- v. “to change, vary”
- brigli n. “variation”
- brigol adj. “afraid; fearful, timid”
- brinc adj. “clear, transparent”
- brindi n. “(Queen) Princess”
- bringlast n. “alabaster”
- brin(in) n. “glassy substance”
- brith- v. “to chance”
- brithla n. “pearl”
- broch n. “mare” see bros(s)
- brod adj. “steadfast, firm” see bron(n)
- brog n. “horse”
- bron(n) adj. “steadfast, firm”
- bronniol adj. “constant, faithful”
- bront adv. “perpetually”
- brontha adj. “continual, continuous, unceasing; everlasting”
- bronwedieth n. “constancy” see bronweth
- bronweth n. “constancy”
- bros(s) n. “mare”
- brum n. “noise” see rum
- brumla- v. “to make a noise” see rumla-
- buin n. “desire, wish”
- #-c suf. “noun or adjective suffix”
- cab- v. “to jump, leap”
- cacha- v. “to laugh”
- cactha- v. “to deride, mock, make fun of, laugh at”
- caf- v. “to taste (used of the thing)”
- caf n. “blade”
- cafalon adj. “bald, *(lit.) head-naked”
- cafol adj. “bald” see cafalon
- cafwen n. “sense of taste, taste, judgement”
- cag n. “joke, jest”
- cagli n. “joke, jest” see cagri
- cagri n. “joke, jest”
- cagrin adj. “funny, amusing”
- cagriol adj. “jocular”
- cail n. “lip”
- cailtha- v. “to kiss”
- cailthi n. “kiss”
- caineglad n. “fortnight”
- caith n. “cause, reason, motive”
- caitha- v. “to make to do or be, cause, compel, induce, bring about”
- caithl n. “source, fount, origin”
- caithonwed adj. “original”
- caithos n. “causation”
- calon adj. “grown (of plants), budd[ing], in blade (of corn)”
- calph n. “bucket”
- caltha- v. “to wax, grow, flourish”
- caltha n. “plant, herb”
- calw n. “green shoot, sapling, sprout”
- calwed adj. “flourishing, adolescent”
- cam adj. “bent, bowed; submissive, humble”
- camba- v. “to stoop, cower” see cam(m)a-
- cam(m)a- v. “to stoop, bend, bow, cower; to submit”
- camp n. “leap”
- canc n. “laughter, mirth, merriment”
- cancha- v. “to laugh” see cacha-
- cancol adj. “laughing”
- cang adj. and n. “tangled, confused, mixed up, awry; tangle, confusion, mêllay”
- canga- v. “to tangle”
- cangi- v. “to go wrong, get tangled” see cinga-
- cant num. card. “four”
- cantha n. “flame”
- cantharol adj. “glaring, flaming”
- canthor n. “blaze, flare, glare”
- cantrib n. “square”
- captha- v. “to startle”
- cara n. “deed, act”
- carc n. “jag, point, fang”
- cariod(wen) n. “activity”
- carm n. “deed, act, exploit”
- carn adj. “done, finished”
- carna n. “gore, blood (especially fresh blood)”
- carn(in) adj. “scarlet”
- carp n. “bundle, bunch”
- carpa adv. “together, in a bunch, bunched-up”
- cartha- v. “to finish, make”
- carthion adj. “complete, perfect”
- cas n. “head, skull”
- cathor n. “helmet, (lit.) head-ward”
- caug¹ n. “humpback”
- caug² adj. “humped, bulging; bent”
- caum n. “knob”
- caura adj. “sour (of milk)”
- cauri n. “cheese” see cûr
- cautha-¹ v. “to taste (of the taster or person); to get flavour of, perceive, notice”
- cautha-² v. “to shave”
- cauthiol adj. “tasteful, endowed with good taste; discreet, circumspect”
- cav- v. “to bend, make stoop”
- cavra- v. “to stoop, cower”
- cectha- v. “to spout out”
- celc n. “glass, a glass”
- celchin adj. “of glass”
- celchwed adj. “glassy”
- celeb n. “silver”
- celebrin adj. “of silver”
- celebriol adj. “like silver”
- †celeg n. “glass”
- celegrin adj. “glassy, like glass”
- celeptha adj. “silvern”
- celu n. “rill, stream, runlet”
- celu- v. “to trickle”
- celwa- n. “to trickle” see celu-
- celwin n. “rill, stream, runlet” see celu
- ceral n. “jar”
- -chi suf. “dim[inutive] suffix”
- cî adv. “here”
- cilm n. “rim, brink, edge”
- ciloba- v. “to twitter, chirp, chirrup”
- cílobi n. “robin” see cilobinc
- cilobinc n. “robin”
- ciloptha- v. “to twitter, chirp, chirrup” see ciloba-
- cilt n. “jerk”
- ciltha- v. “to tug, jerk (out)”
- †cim n. “blade”
- cinga- v. “to go wrong, get tangled”
- cingra adj. “plaited”
- cingra- v. “to plait”
- cingrafindl n. “pigtail”
- cing(win) n. “spider”
- cint adv. “hither”
- cintha- v. “to light, set alight”
- cîr adj. “sour (of milk)” see caura
- cír n. “cheese” see cûr
- cîrin adj. “present (place or time), modern”
- cith n. “affair, matter, thing”
- clamfa- v. “to grab, claw at”
- clam(p) n. “grasp, claw”
- clann n. “branch”
- clast n. “bud, shoot, sprout”
- clath n. “small branch, twig”
- *cli adj. “?attractive”
- clib- v. “to uphold, support; to lean”
- clidhron n. “[unglossed]”
- climbol n. “[unglossed]”
- climli n. “heaven, sky”
- cloch n. “stone (small), stone of fruit”
- clochiol adj. “stone”
- clochrin adj. “stony, stone-like” see clogrin
- clochwed adj. “stony, stone-covered” see clogwed
- clocthi n. “pebble”
- clog n. “stone (small)” see cloch
- clogod n. “shingle beach”
- clogrin adj. “stony, stone-like”
- clogwed adj. “stony, stone-covered”
- closs n. “shingle”
- cluim adj. “warm, cosy”
- cluimri n. “pleasant warmth, cosiness”
- clum(mi) n. “mushroom”
- cod n. “nut”
- codiavol adj. “nutbearing” see codiof
- codiof adj. “nutbearing”
- codomla n. “*chestnut”
- codorn n. “*nut tree”
- codrin adj. “nutty”
- codron n. “*nut tree” see codorn
- codwalion n. “walnut, chestnut”
- codwed adj. “nutbearing”
- côf n. “savour, smack, odour”
- cog n. “claw, fist”
- côl n. “herb, vegetable, edible plant; wort”
- colc n. “chest, box”
- colu n. “pestilence”
- coluid adj. “pestilent”
- colw adj. “black”
- côma n. “disease, illness”
- cômathol adj. “diseased, ill”
- corin adj. “round, circular; rolling” see corol
- corm n. “ring, circle, disc”
- corn n. “loaf”
- corob n. “skull”
- corol adj. “round, circular; rolling”
- cortheb n. “bounds, boundary”
- coth n. “nutshell, husk”
- craig adj. “crooked”
- craith n. “foam, froth, spume”
- craitho- v. “to spit” see crectha-
- cranta- v. “to finish, achieve, accomplish, complete”
- crantha- v. “to complete” see cranta-
- crech n. “spittle”
- crectha- v. “to spit”
- crî n. “knife”
- crib- v. “to gather, pluck”
- crictha- v. “to bend”
- crig n. “elbow”
- crinc adj. and n. “bent and thin; crescent”
- crintha adj. “rosy, pink”
- crinthammos n. “robin, (lit.) red-breast”
- criptha adj. and adv. “together, in a bunch, bunched-up”
- crisc adj. “sharp”
- criscolas n. “holly, (lit.) *sharp-leaf”
- cris(s) n. “cleft, gash, gully, ravine”
- crist n. “knife; slash, slice”
- crista- v. “to slash, cut, slice”
- crithiol adj. “circular” see crithog
- crithla- v. “to encircle; to circle, go round”
- crithog adj. “circular”
- crithos n. “circle, ring”
- croctha- v. “to catch, snare, trap”
- crog n. “hook”
- crogin adj. “hooked”
- crôl adj. “round”
- cross n. “ball”
- crost n. “lump, ball, cake”
- crug n. “beak (espec. of a ship)”
- crui n. “colour”
- cruim adj. “coloured”
- cruith n. “colour, complexion, appearance”
- crunc n. “crow”
- cû n. “bow, crescent; the waxing or waning moon”
- cub adj. “hollow”
- cuctha n. “consideration”
- cucthol adj. “painstaking”
- cug- v. “to ponder, resolve, think, consider”
- cuib adj. “alive”
- cuibri n. “vitality”
- cuid n. “animal, living creature”
- cuil n. “life, lifetime”
- cuilborn n. “lifetime”
- cuilin adj. “golden” see culwin
- cuilog adj. “alive, lively”
- cuilogri n. “liveliness”
- cuilogwi n. “liveliness” see cuilogri
- cuith n. “life, the vital principle; living body”
- cuitha- v. “to live, be alive”
- cuithos n. “life (period of life); living, livelihood”
- †culon n. “*gold” see †culu
- †culu n. “gold”
- culwin adj. “golden”
- cûm n. “mound (especially grave), burial mound”
- cum- v. “to lie (down)”
- cumli n. “couch”
- cûn adj. “bowed, bent, concave”
- cunghol adj. “painstaking”
- cuno n. “care, thought, ‘pains’”
- cunwed adj. “bowed, bent, concave” see cûn
- cuptha- v. “to bend (tr).”
- cur- v. “to turn sour, curdle, congeal”
- cûr n. “cheese”
- curdhu n. “sin, wickedness, evil”
- curdhuig n. “sinner [m.]” see curdhweg
- curdhuin n. “sinner [f.]” see curdhwin
- curdhweg n. “sinner [m.]”
- curdhwin n. “sinner [f.]”
- curin adj. “magical”
- curth n. “curd”
- curtha- v. “to curdle, to make cheese (tr.)”
- curu n. “magic”
- curug n. “wizard”
- curus n. “witch”
- curusôn n. “witchcraft”
- curuthli n. “enchantments, sorcery”
- cusc adj. “hushed, quiet; abashed” see susc
- cuvon adj. “bowed, bent, concave” see cûn
- cwam adj. “ill”
- cwanc adj. “sickly, poorly, seedy”
- cwancha- v. “to ail”
- cwanchri n. “ailment”
- cwant adj. “the whole, all the (with article); full”
- cwarth (cwardh-) adj. “evil, bad, wicked”
- cwas- v. “to shake, wag, nod, flap”
- cwast adj. “shaking”
- cwath- v. “to shake, wag, nod” see cwas-
- cwathil n. “plume” see cwathli
- cwathli n. “plume, spray, tassel”
- cwathra- v. “to shake (intr.)”
- cwed- v. “to say, tell”
- Cwedhrin n. “*Elvish (Qenya)” see Cweneglin
- cwedri n. “telling (of tales)”
- cwel- v. “to fade, wither”
- cweleg n. “corpse, dead body”
- cwelm n. “dusk”
- cweloth n. “fading”
- Cweneglin n. “*Elvish (Qenya)”
- Cwenn n. “Elf”
- cwent n. “tale, saying”
- cwerc n. “throat”
- cwess n. “saying, proverb”
- cweth n. “word”
- cwibra- v. “to arouse (tr.)”
- cwidhra- v. “to rustle” see cwira-
- cwil n. “hue, tint”
- cwîl adj. “quiet, peaceful, gentle”
- cwildred n. “bat (animal)”
- cwileg n. “alder”
- cwiliog adj. “bright-hued”
- cwilon adj. “bright-hued” see cwiliog
- cwim adj. “awake, alert, alive”
- cwimp adj. “alert, vigilant”
- cwim(ri) n. “body, flesh”
- cwing n. “bow”
- cwingfim adj. “skilled at archery”
- cwingfimli n. “skill at archery”
- cwinglios n. “archery”
- cwingron n. “archer”
- cwintha- v. “to fill”
- cwiptha- v. “to arouse (tr.)”
- cwir- v. “to stir, stir round, make spin”
- cwîr n. “cream”
- cwira- v. “to rustle”
- cwiril n. “spindle”
- cwiruin n. “spinning wheel”
- cwist n. “secret”
- cwitha- v. “to murmur, whisper”
- cwithra- v. “to murmur, whisper” see cwitha-
- cwithri n. “whisper”
- cwithwiros n. “poplar”
- cwiv- v. “to be awake”
- cwivra- v. “to awaken (intr.)”
- cwivros n. “awakening”
- dâ adj. “high”
- da prep. “?with, into”
- dâd n. “grandfather”
- dâf n. “bark” see dafros
- daf- v. “to strip, flay, peel skin”
- dafros n. “bark, skin, peel”
- dai¹ n. “sky”
- dai² adv. “very, exceedingly”
- daimoth n. “heaven”
- dair n. “play, merriment”
- daira- v. “to play” see dairtha-
- dairiol adj. “merry (of things), funny”
- dairion adj. “merry” see dairog
- dairog adj. “merry (of persons)”
- dairtha- v. “to play, amuse”
- dairwed adj. “merry, funny (common)”
- dairwen n. “mirth”
- dal n. “cairn”
- dala- [nd-] v. “to sing or ring”
- dalech n. “(upright) stone”
- daleg n. “(upright) stone” see dalech
- daltha- v. “to erect, set up”
- dân n. “day” see dana
- dana n. “day (24 hours)”
- danoriol adj. “daily”
- dant n. “lamp”
- dantha- v. “to illuminate, light up, illustrate”
- danthos n. “(artificial) light, illumination”
- dara adj. “lofty”
- darath n. “summit, peak” see daroth
- daroth n. “summit, peak”
- dauth n. “skin, hide”
- dautha adj. “naked, stripped”
- dauth(r)a- v. “to strip, flay”
- deg pron. “what (n[euter])”
- deil(i)an n. “beech tree” see deldron
- deldrin grontholas [nd-] n. “oakleaved beech” see deldron grondolas
- deldrinwed [nd-] adj. “beechen”
- deldrogod [nd-] n. “beech nut”
- deldron [nd-] n. “beech (tree)”
- deldron grondolas [nd-] n. “oakleaved beech”
- delmos n. “beech nuts, mast [= fruit of beech, oak, chestnut]”
- delwen n. “beech tree” see deldron
- difedhin adj. and n. “*outlaw” see nifedhin
- dim adj. “past, over, former”
- dimborn n. “the past, past days, olden times”
- dîn adv. “once (up a time), long ago, formerly”
- dir pron. “who (f.)”
- dîr adj. “long (of time)”
- diradhim adv. “once upon a time” see diradhin
- diradhin adv. “once upon a time”
- diriol adj. “tedious”
- dod n. “berry”
- dod- v. “to fall down, drop”
- dodri n. “falling”
- dodri·lassion n. “autumn, *(lit.) falling of leaves”
- dôf n. “hide, skin”
- dol- [nd-] v. “to dig”
- dolc [nd-] adj. “deep”
- doldrin [nd-] n. “mole”
- dolfa [nd-] n. “mole”
- dólin n. “song”
- dolm [nd-] n. “pit”
- dolmeg [nd-] n. “mole”
- don pron. “who”
- dôn ? “[unglossed]”
- dont n. “fall, bump, drop”
- dôr [nd-] n. “land, country (inhabited), people of the land”
- dori n. “queen”
- dorm n. “summit”
- dorn n. “seat”
- dorn(a) [nd-] n. “(holm) oak, ilex”
- doros n. “throne”
- dortha- v. “to settle”
- dorven [nd-] n. “landscape, scene, *(lit.) land-shape”
- dos adv. “when”
- doth [nd-] n. “drizzle, damp, moisture”
- dothli n. “drizzle”
- drab n. “labour, toil, irksome work”
- drab- v. “to labour, work; (impersonal) to irk, annoy”
- drabri adj. “labouring”
- drambor n. “thudder”
- drauth adj. “weary, toilworn, tired”
- drautha- v. “to weary, tire out”
- drauthiol adj. “arduous, labourious”
- drauthos n. “toil, weariness from labour”
- drib- [nd-] v. “to rot, decay, wear out”
- dribin adj. “worn out”
- drim n. “dew”
- -drin suf. “suffix in the name of languages” see -glin
- †drinn n. “ring, disc”
- drint n. “twist, wrench, turn”
- drintha- v. “to turn (tr.), twist”
- †drio [nd-] n. “hero, warrior”
- driod [nd-] n. “heroism, valour”
- driodweg [nd-] n. “hero, warrior”
- driodwen [nd-] n. “heroism, valour”
- driog [nd-] adj. “valiant”
- driothweg [nd-] n. “hero, warrior” see driodweg
- driothwen [nd-] n. “heroism, valour” see driodwen
- drith [nd-] n. “savour, smell, flavour; suggestion, inkling”
- drith- v. “it smells, smacks of, savours of”
- drô n. “wheel track, rut”
- drog n. “slave, thrall, servant”
- drogla n. “cart”
- drogod n. “slavery, bondage, thraldom”
- drogol adj. “servile, slavish; base, mean” see drogwed
- drogwed adj. “servile, slavish; base, mean”
- drogwin n. “slave woman”
- dronn [nd-] n. “race, course, track”
- drû n. “wood, forest” see drui
- drui n. “wood, forest”
- drum adj. “stout, firm, strong”
- dui adv. “where”
- duif (duiv-) n. “stream”
- duil¹ n. and adj. “flight, power of flight; having power of flight, fledged”
- duil² n. “swallow”
- duila- v. “to fly”
- duileg adj. “having power of flight, fledged”
- duilinc n. “swallow” see duilin(g)
- duilin(g) n. “swallow”
- duivrad n. “canal”
- duivrant n. “aqueduct”
- dûl [nd-] adj. “hollow”
- dultha- v. “to dine”
- dultha n. “supper, dinner”
- dulwen n. “feast”
- dum adj. “secret, not to be spoken”
- dumgort n. “(evil) idol” see dungort
- dungort n. “(evil) idol”
- durog adj. “wooden”
- duru n. “wood; pole, beam, log”
- duruin adj. “wooden” see durog
- dwindi n. “a swift (bird)”
- †ectha- v. “to spout, jet”
- ectha n. “sword”
- ecthadra- v. “to slay, put to the sword”
- ecthel(uin) n. “fountain, fount”
- ecthor n. “warrior, swordsman”
- ed prep. “close by”
- edh prep. “outside, near borders of, near, hard by, beside”
- edhos prep. “just without, close by”
- #-eg suf. “adjectival suffix” see #-og
- eg¹ n. “point”
- eg² adv. “far away, wide, distant, far off”
- egelmion adj. “broadshouldered”
- egiont adj. “further, farther”
- Egla n. “fairy, (lit.) being from outside”
- egli(n) n. “needle”
- egra adj. “distant, far away”
- egrin adj. “wide, vast, broad; far”
- egriol adj. “excessive”
- egros adv. “distant, far away”
- egwed adj. “far, distant”
- eiben n. “cherry” see aibin
- eilian n. “branch”
- eilin n. “pool” see ailion
- eirin adj. “holy” see †air(in)
- eithlos n. “family”
- eithog n. “ancestor, †father, sire”
- eithweg n. “ancestor, †father, sire” see eithog
- el conj. “or”
- elc adv. and n. “else, something else”
- elef n. “half, half a ...”
- eleg adj. “other, else”
- elegrin adj. “different, strange”
- elf n. “heart”
- elfeg adj. “half”
- elfel adj. “different, like something else”
- elf(in) num. card. “five”
- elma- v. “to marvel at, admire”
- elm(en) n. “wonder; singular, marvelous or unique thing; something strange”
- elt¹ n. “change”
- elt² n. “dig, poke (probe), tug, lug”
- elta- v. “to draw, tug, lug; to thrust, dig, poke (inward)”
- eltha adv. “or, otherwise”
- eltha- v. “to alter, change”
- el(u)m interj. “think of that!”
- em adj. “named, called by name”
- embrin adj. “by name, named”
- emfeg adj. “infamous, of evil name”
- en pron. “that by you, that already mentioned (by you), that past”
- end n. “birds nest”
- enfeg adj. “infamous, of evil name” see emfeg
- eng adj. and n. “smooth, level”
- eng(a) n. “plain, vale”
- engan n. “spear”
- engri n. “flat surface, level, plane”
- engri[n] adj. “of iron” see angrin
- engriol adj. “vale like, of the vale”
- enn n. “name”
- enos n. “title”
- entha- v. “to name, call, indicate, point out”
- entha adv. “there by you, thither”
- enu- v. “to be called, be named”
- enuith n. “title” see enos
- enwa- v. “to be called, be named” see enu-
- enweg n. “name sake”
- enwiol adj. “nominal”
- er adj. “one”
- ereg adj. “alone, only”
- ereth n. “solitude, oneness, loneliness”
- er(e)tha- v. “to isolate, rob, deprive”
- erethog adj. “isolated, solitary, lonely” see erethrin
- erethrin adj. “isolated, solitary, lonely”
- ermin n. “desert, waste” see armin
- ert adv. “once, once only”
- erth (erdh-) n. “wish”
- erthi adv. “also, as well, besides, too” see arthi
- erw adv. “only”
- erwed adj. “unique”
- esc n. “sharp point, sharp edge”
- est(i)rin n. “pinnacle, tower”
- estirion n. “pinnacle, tower” see est(i)rin
- -eth suf. “abstract noun” see #-(o)th
- ethl(in) n. “ivy”
- fâ- v. “to have, hold, possess”
- fab- v. “to handle, touch, feel”
- fabli n. “sense of touch”
- fabwed adj. “corpulent”
- fad adv. “enough”
- fadin adj. “sated, saturated”
- fadra- v. “to sate, weary, ‘feed up’”
- fadrin adj. “sufficient”
- fadriol adj. “sufficient” see fadrin
- fadrog adj. “tiresome”
- fadro(n) adj. “too much”
- fadros n. “satiety, weariness of anything”
- faf- v. “to puff, blow, pant”
- fafli n. “bladder”
- fag- v. “to cut”
- fagin adj. “cut”
- faidwen n. “freedom”
- faig adj. “cruel”
- faigli n. “hair, long tresses”
- faiglim adj. “having long hair”
- faiglion adj. “having long hair”
- faigri n. “cruelty”
- fail adj. “pale, pallid”
- failtha- v. “go pale”
- failthi n. “pallor”
- faina- v. “to get free”
- fair adj. “free, unconstrained”
- fairtha- v. “to set free, release”
- fairthos n. “liberty”
- faith n. “liberty”
- faithir n. “liberator, Saviour”
- falas n. “beach” see falos
- falc n. “cleft, gash; cleft, ravine, cliffs”
- falchon n. “great two-handed sword, twibill”
- falchor n. “cliffs” see falchos
- falchos n. “cliffs”
- falin adj. “naked” see falon
- falm n. “breaker, wave”
- falon adj. “naked”
- falos n. “sea-marge, surf, coast, line, beach; margin, fringe, edge”
- falt adj. “bare”
- faltha- v. “to strip, despoil, rob, make bare”
- fam n. “fat belly, paunch”
- famfa- v. “to maul”
- famfolc adj. “fat-bellied”
- famp n. “handling, touching, feeling; stroking, caressing, ‘fuss’; fingering, appraising, assay”
- fanc n. “cut”
- fang n. “(long) beard”
- fann n. “year”
- fant adj. “crooked, bent, bowed”
- far adv. “yet, however”
- far- v. “to separate, sever, divide; to depart, leave”
- farc n. “split, crack; division, quarrel”
- farn n. “mark, boundary; shore”
- far(o)n adj. “separate, different, strange”
- faronwed adj. “foreign”
- faronweg n. “foreigner (m.)”
- faronwin n. “foreigner (f.)”
- faroth n. “boundary”
- fartha- v. “to divide (tr.)”
- fas- v. “to wash”
- fasc adj. “clean”
- fasca- v. “to splash, sprinkle”
- fass n. “tassle” see fath
- fast¹ n. “wash, cleaning”
- fast² n. “holder, stand”
- fath n. “tassle”
- fath² n. “possession, property; rights, legality”
- fathli n. “tasselled fringe”
- fathrin adj. “tasselled”
- fathwed adj. “tasselled”
- fau- v. “to smell, give off a smell”
- faug¹ adj. “stinking”
- faug² n. “wood smoke”
- fauglas n. “tobacco” see fuglas
- faust n. “smell, odour (neither pleasant nor unpleasant)”
- fautha- v. “to snow” see fôtha-
- fech adj. “bad” see fêg
- fectha- v. “to destroy, ruin, spoil”
- fecthi adj. “less bad; baddish, naughty”
- †fecthir n. “destroyer, slayer; bane”
- fedhin n. and adj. “bound by agreement; ally, friend”
- fedhir n. “law; properly bond, convention, agreement”
- fedhirweg n. “lawman, lawyer”
- fedhra- v. “to unite in a band”
- fedhril n. “one bound by oath [f.]”
- fedhrog n. “one bound by oath”
- fedhwed adj. “lawful”
- fedhwen n. “treaty”
- fêg adj. “bad, poor, wretched”
- fegla adj. “worse”
- fegrin adj. “free”
- feigien adj. “worse”
- fel prep. and adv. “like; (as av.) as, like”
- felcha- v. “to equal” see felegra-
- felectha- v. “to make equal, equalize”
- feleg adj. “equal”
- felegra- v. “to equal”
- felegrin adj. “equable”
- feltha- v. “to resemble, seem like; to seem likely, be probable”
- feltha adj. “similar, like”
- felthadrin adj. “probable”
- felu- v. “to seem”
- felweg n. “one’s fellow or equal, rival”
- fem n. “venom (of snakes), poison in general”
- feng n. “arrow, war arrow”
- fengvain n. “quiver”
- fengwathil n. “arrow feathering”
- fenlug n. “snake”
- fenog adj. “venomous”
- fent n. “snake”
- fenwed adj. “venomous” see fenog
- fesc adj. “itching, irritating”
- fesca- v. “to itch, irritate”
- fess n. “itch, itching”
- fest n. “breath, breathing”
- festa- v. “to breath[e]”
- feth n. “one breath”
- fi- pron. “you, 2nd-person singular”
- fî n. “[unglossed]”
- fidhra n. “collective hair”
- fidhrad adj. “hairy, hirsute”
- #fidhrin adj. “haired”
- fien adv. “worse”
- filc n. “fern” see fileg
- fileg n. “fern”
- fim adj. “clever, right hand”
- fimli n. “skill”
- fimlios n. “skilfulness”
- finc n. “trick”
- findel n. “tress”
- fing adj. “narrow”
- fingl n. “tress”
- fingli n. “narrow place, straits, sound, pass in mountains”
- finig n. “trick” see finc
- fini(o)s n. “larch”
- finn n. “lock of hair”
- finnil n. “tress” see fingl
- fintha- v. “to twist; to deceive, cheat, take in”
- fintha pron. “thine”
- finthi n. “idea, notion”
- finweg n. “craftsman, man of skill”
- finwi n. “skill” see fimli
- fion n. “bowl, goblet”
- fiont adj. “least”
- fiont(ha) adj. “later”
- fir adj. “less”
- fîr adj. “late”
- fith (fidh-) n. “single hair”
- flad n. “sward, grass”
- fladwen n. “meadow, grassland”
- fladweth n. “meadow, grassland” see fladwen
- flan n. “scorn”
- flant n. “expression of scorn, leer, sneer”
- flantha- v. “to scorn, utterly despise”
- flanthog adj. “scornful”
- flass n. “sea-marge, surf; foam; margin, ragged margin, fringe”
- flathnir n. “foam fay” see flathwin
- flathrin adj. “foamy, tasseled”
- flathwi n. “scud, spray, spindrift”
- flathwin n. “foam fay”
- flathwing n. “scud, spray, spindrift” see flathwi
- flidhra adj. “‘willowy’, graceful”
- flig- v. “to hew”
- flinc n. “chip”
- floss n. “breaker”
- fluim n. “(black) smoke, reek”
- fo n. “a clan”
- fô n. “snow”
- fod n. “end, butt, bottom”
- fodra adj. “the last, latest, endmost”
- fodra- v. “to bring to an end, end, finish; to come to an end, end, finish”
- fôf n. “fool”
- fofri n. “folly”
- fofrin adj. “foolish”
- fofru n. “folly” see fofri
- fôl adj. “empty, bare, leafless (esp. of trees)”
- folc adj. “evil-smelling”
- folorin n. “winter”
- foltha- v. “to emit smoke, smoulder, reek”
- fôr n. “gulf, gap”
- forog n. “enemy”
- fôs n. “bath”
- fost n. “odour”
- fostrin adj. “odorous”
- fôtha- v. “to snow”
- fô(tha) n. “hoard”
- fring n. “necklace, carcanet”
- fripthon n. “stalk”
- fuctha- v. “to smoke (over a wood fire)”
- fufril n. “moth”
- fufuin n. “hoard” see fûn
- fug- v. “to smoulder”
- fugla- v. “to smoke (a pipe)”
- fuglas n. “tobacco, *(lit.) smoke leaf”
- fuglathrod n. “pipe”
- fuglos n. “tobacco” see fuglas
- fugri n. “smother (of smoke)”
- fui n. “night”
- fuin¹ adj. “secret, dark; hoarded”
- fuin² adv. “worse” see fien
- fuior n. “deadly nightshade”
- fuis n. “hoard”
- fuitha-¹ v. “to hide (tr.)”
- fuitha-² v. “to fall (of night); to grow dark”
- fuithlog n. “dragon (who guards treasure)” see fuithlug
- fuithlug n. “dragon (who guards treasure)”
- fûn n. “hoard”
- func n. “smoke”
- fund n. “hoard”
- fung adj. “dark (esp. of colour)”
- funt n. “elephant”
- fûr n. “lie”
- fur- v. “to conceal; to lie”
- furion adj. “secret, concealed, hidden”
- furn adj. “secret, concealed” see furion
- fweg n. “broom”
- fwegli n. “brush”
- fwegra- v. “to sweep”
- fwi- pref. “fem. patronymic prefix”
- fwion n. “nephew”
- fwîr n. “niece”
- ga- pref. “very, more”
- gab- v. “to bark, bay (of dogs)”
- gach n. “milch cow”
- gad(a) n. “joint, link; small lane, track; isthmus”
- gada- v. “to join, connect, unite”
- gadorwen n. “society”
- gados n. “union, association, fellowship”
- gadr n. “joint, link of chain”
- gadren n. “*brother in law, kinsman by marriage”
- gadres n. “*sister in law, kinswoman by marriage”
- gadron n. “fellow, associate”
- gadros n. “union, association, fellowship” see gados
- gadu adj. “joined, connected”
- gadweth n. “union, joining; wedding”
- gadwi n. “twins”
- gag n. “jaw”
- gagron n. “yoke ox, bullock”
- gaib adj. “*pregnant” see gaiw
- gaibra- v. “to impregnate”
- gaid adv. “more”
- gaig n. “weapon, tool”
- gaigin n. “arms” see gaig
- gail n. “star”
- gais n. “steel”
- gaisin adj. “of steel”
- gaist n. “torment, oppression”
- gaista- [ng-] v. “to oppress, cause great grief to”
- gaithrin adj. “like steel”
- gaiw adj. “pregnant”
- gal- v. “to shine (golden, as the Sun)”
- gal(a) n. “daylight, light”
- galdon n. “tree”
- galoth n. “window, *(lit.) light hole”
- galt n. “yoke”
- galtha- v. “to kindle”
- galwed adj. “brilliant, shining”
- galwen n. “brilliance”
- gam n. “shout”
- gama- v. “to call, shout to”
- gam(m)a- v. “to gain, profit, increase; to be profitable, bring in revenue”
- gân adj. “young”
- gand adj. “dark & gloomy; morose; harsh, ill tempered, sour, gloomy of temper”
- gandos n. “morose temper”
- ganos n. “youth”
- ganothrin adj. “youthful”
- gant adj. “larger, greater, more, (lit.) increased”
- gantha adv. “more”
- ganthan adj. “waxen, grown big, grown up, adult, [originally?] large”
- garob n. “cloak, outer garment”
- gar(th) (gardh-) n. “place, district”
- garth adj. “beloved”
- gartha- v. “to admire, have affection or respect for”
- garw n. and adj. “sown-field; tilled”
- gath¹ n. “neck”
- †gath² (gadh-) n. “gloom, blight”
- gatha ? “[unglossed]”
- gaudhwen n. “fever”
- gaul¹ n. “burden”
- gaul² n. “light” see gal(a)
- gaust n. “corn, crop (espec. of cereal)”
- gauth n. “heat (esp. of body)”
- gav- v. “to produce, yield, bear fruit”
- gavon n. “harvest (time)”
- gavos n. “yield, crop, produce”
- gawlas n. “forest” see goloth
- ged n. “kinsman†; friend, chum”
- gedfel adj. “friendly, affable, amiable”
- gedren n. “second cousin (m.)”
- gedres n. “second cousin (f.)”
- gedrin adj. “sib, akin”
- gedweth n. “kinship†, friendship”
- -gen suf. “*earth”
- gen n. “closed hand, grip”
- gentha- v. “to grip, seize, lay hold of”
- ger n. “ore, metal”
- gerd(h)olm n. “mine”
- gerin adj. “metallic”
- gersauth n. “mine”
- gersoth n. “mine” see gersauth
- geth¹ n. “clan, kindred, folk”
- geth² n. “ore of metals (esp. raw iron)”
- gethli n. “friendship”
- gethlir n. “friend; †kinswoman”
- gil- v. “to gleam, shine pale and silver (as of the moon)”
- gî(laith) adv. “once, in past”
- Gilim n. “winter”
- gilm n. “moonlight, silver light”
- gilt n. “a gleam”
- giltha n. “white metal”
- gima- v. “to hear”
- gimli n. “(sense of) hearing”
- gimra- v. “to hearken to, listen to”
- gimri n. “hearkening, attention”
- gimriol adj. “audible, noticeable”
- ging n. “spider” see gung
- gintha- v. “to join to (intr.), add, increase, add to” see intha-¹
- giol adj. “fecund; conceiving, having conceived, just pregnant”
- gioth n. “germ, foetus, embryon”
- giothra- v. “to germinate, be conceived”
- giothrin adj. “embryonic”
- gîr n. “yesterday”
- gîrin adj. “bygone, old, belonging to former days, olden, former, ancient”
- giwl adj. “fecund; conceiving, having conceived, just pregnant” see giol
- giwol adj. “fecund; conceiving, having conceived, just pregnant” see giol
- giwth n. “germ, foetus, embryon” see gioth
- glâ n. “day, daytime”
- glaib adj. “dripping wet”
- glaim adj. “serene, clear, fair (espec. of weather)”
- glaimri n. “serenity, fair weather”
- glair n. “meadow”
- #(g)lairin n. “*poem”
- glais n. “sweetness”
- glâm n. “hatred, loathing, fierce hate”
- glamog adj. “loathsome”
- glamra- v. “to abominate, loath, detest”
- glamri n. “bitter feud”
- glan adj. “pure, clean, (originally) bright”
- glantha- v. “to cleanse, purify, purge”
- glant(hi) n. “cleanness”
- glanthin adj. “cleanly, pure”
- glanweth n. “cleanliness, purity”
- glanwethrin adj. “cleanly, pure”
- glar(os) n. “glare, blaze, splendour”
- glarossiol adj. “dazzling”
- glarosta- v. “to dazzle”
- glartha- v. “to dazzle” see glarosta-
- glarw(ed) adj. “bright, light”
- glâs n. “brilliance, clarity” see glass
- glass n. “brilliance, clarity”
- glast n. “marble”
- glastrin adj. “marble”
- glathrin adj. “brilliant, lucent”
- glaur adj. “light, bright” see glarw(ed)
- gledhrin adj. “slender” see glen(d)rin
- gledhrinios n. “slenderness” see glen(d)rinios
- (g)leg adj. “keen, sharp, piercing”
- glen(d)rin adj. “slender”
- glen(d)rinios n. “slenderness”
- glen(n) adj. “thin, fine, slender”
- glent n. “thinness” see glenweth
- glenweth n. “thinness”
- glest [ng-] n. “moot, gathering, concourse, assembly”
- glesta- v. “to gather”
- glib¹ n. “drop of water”
- glib² adj. “liquid”
- glim adj. “shimmering”
- glimri n. “sheen”
- glin n. “sound, voice, utterance”
- -glin suf. “suffix in the name of languages”
- glindwil n. “swallow”
- gling n. “music”
- glingon n. “song, chanting, chant”
- glingrin adj. “musical”
- glint n. “crystal”
- glîr n. “song, poem”
- glis adj. “sweet”
- glisc adj. “fond of sweets; fond of saying sweet or flattering things, suave, flattering”
- glisca- v. “to have a sweet tooth, like sweet things”
- glissith n. “sugar”
- glist n. “sugar”
- glith n. “dale, hillslope”
- glô n. “sunrise, dawn, daybreak”
- glod n. “gullet, throat”
- glóna- v. “to dawn”
- glonta- v. “to swallow, gulp, devour”
- glonthen n. “dandelion, (lit.) eye of the day”
- glôr n. “gold”
- glôrin adj. “golden, of gold”
- glôriol adj. “golden, like gold”
- glo(r)nethlin n. “meadowgold, buttercup”
- glôs n. “flower, best of anything; blooming time, acme, floruit”
- gloss adj. “white, clear white”
- glost n. “whiteness”
- †glothrin adj. “white, clear white”
- glui n. “snow”
- glum¹ adj. “(over) burdened; dull, heavy, sad”
- glum² n. “cloud” see lum
- glumri n. “moroseness, sadness”
- go-¹ pref. “together, in one; with”
- go-² pref. “son of”
- gob n. “hollow of hand”
- gôbi n. “large hound”
- gobli n. “dell”
- gobos n. “haven”
- gochest n. “brother and brother, brother and sister, etc.”
- gochestri n. “consanguinity”
- gochethri n. “consanguinity” see gochestri
- gôd n. “joint, link of chain”
- godaithion adj. “educated”
- godaithri n. “education, erudition; grammar”
- godaithrinwed adj. “grammatical”
- godaithri(o)n adj. “learned, educated”
- godra adj. “joined, united, joint”
- gôf n. “fruit (esp. of tree)”
- gôf·clochiol n. “stone-fruit”
- gofedhin adj. “united, allied, ‘friends’”
- gofedhra- v. “to unite in a band”
- gofedhrog n. “ally”
- gofel adj. and adv. “exactly alike”
- gofeltha adj. “*similar, like”
- gofelthi n. “exact similarity”
- gofelweg n. “one’s fellow or equal, rival”
- gofil adj. and adv. “exactly alike” see gofel
- gôg adj. “clumsy; left (hand)”
- gogail n. “mouth”
- gogel n. “mouth” see gogail
- gogìl n. “mouth” see gogail
- gol- v. “to stink”
- gôl¹ n. “daylight, day”
- golairin n. “rime, rhyme; riming poem”
- golaudri n. “deluge, flood”
- golc n. “stink, stench” see golod
- Gold [ng-] n. “Gnome” see Golda
- Golda [ng-] n. “Gnome, wise one”
- Goldogrin n. “Language of the Gnomes”
- Goldrin adj. “Gnome”
- golesta- v. “to gather (intr.)”
- golma n. “lore, wisdom, ancient lore”
- golod n. “stink, stench”
- golog adj. “stinking”
- goloth [ng-] n. “forest”
- Goltha [ng-] n. “Gnome” see Golda
- golw adj. “stinking” see golog
- golweg n. “*Gnomish man”
- golwin n. “*Gnomish woman”
- gôm n. “shout, call; name, nickname”
- gôma adv. “by name, nicknamed”
- gôma- v. “to nickname”
- gomaithri n. “government”
- gomintha adv. “together”
- gomod n. “companionship, living together; community, fellowship”
- gomodril n. “companion, associate, fellow (f.); nun”
- gomodron n. “companion, associate, fellow; monk”
- gomol n. “the teeth, two rows of teeth”
- gon- pref. “son of” see go-²
- gond n. “stone” see gonn
- gonn n. “(great) stone, rock”
- gonothri(n) adj. “of same kindred”
- gontha¹ n. “pillar, stele, memorial”
- gontha² n. “boy”
- gonthos n. “great rock”
- gonwed adj. “rocky”
- gôr adj. “each, all”
- gor-¹ [ng-] pref. “all, altogether, quite”
- gor-² v. “to die”
- goredhin [ng-] adj. “related, sib, akin”
- goredhnir n. “cousin (f.)” see goredhwin
- goredhweg n. “cousin (m.)”
- goredhwin n. “cousin (f.)”
- goredin adj. “*related” see goredhin
- gorin n. “circle of trees”
- gorn n. “dung”
- gort n. “idol”
- gorthin n. “fane, temple”
- goth n. “war, strife”
- gôtha- v. “to possess, have, hold”
- gothfeng n. “(war-)arrow, a great arrow; an arrow sent as a summons to war”
- gothnir n. “amazon” see gothwin
- gothri n. “warfare”
- gothriol adj. “warlike”
- gothweg n. “warrior”
- gothwen n. “battle”
- gothwilm n. “armistice”
- gothwin n. “amazon”
- govaithum adj. “clad”
- govedhri n. “wedding”
- govedhwen n. “matrimony”
- goveg adj. “just like”
- govin(d)riol adj. “long-acorned”
- govinra adj. “long-acorned” see govin(d)riol
- govron n. “acorn”
- grail n. “ring, circle, circlet”
- grand n. “town” see grann
- grann n. “strong place, fort; walled town, city”
- gratha- v. “to rub, scratch, fray”
- graug n. “demon”
- graus n. “sow, *female pig”
- grendi n. “cousinship, family (in a wide sense)”
- grest n. “succour, salvation”
- gresta- v. “to aid, help, succour, support”
- gretha- v. “to save, rescue, preserve”
- grethron n. “saviour”
- grileg adj. “ringed, hooped shape”
- grilthi n. “finger-ring”
- grim n. “host, folk”
- -grin suf. “suffix in the name of languages” see -glin
- grind n. “ankle, wrist” see grinn
- grinn n. “ankle, wrist”
- grintha adj. “*red” see crintha
- grith (grith-) n. “care, attention, affection”
- grith- v. “to attend to, tend, care, care for, mind”
- grithonwed adj. “thoughtful, careful; unselfish”
- grôg n. “demon” see graug
- grôn adj. “oak, oaktree”
- grondolas adj. “oakleaved” see grontholas
- grondos n. “oaktree” see gronthos
- grondrui n. “oakwood”
- gronduru n. “oakwood (mat)”
- gronoch n. “acorn”
- grontholas adj. “oakleaved”
- gronthorn n. “oaktree”
- gronthos n. “oaktree”
- gronthos deldrinwed n. “oakleaved beech”
- grosgen n. “soil”
- groth n. “earth, soil”
- grothorf n. “potato”
- grûd n. “cavern”
- grûda n. “cave” see grûd
- grui adj. “ferocity, horror”
- gruigarm n. “*deed of horror, angry or violent act, vengeance”
- gruim adj. “fierce” see grum
- gruith n. “deed of horror, angry or violent act, vengeance”
- gruithod n. “ferocious wrath”
- gruithodwen n. “ferocity, barbarity”
- gruithog adj. “ferocious, mad with wrath”
- grum adj. “fierce”
- gudh- v. “to be hot (intr.)”
- gudhri n. “inflammation; conflagration”
- gudhrin adj. “inflamed, burning hot”
- gudhriol adj. “inflamed, inflammatory”
- gui adv. “just, just now, only just, already”
- guig n. “piece of property”
- guin n. “*woman” see gwin
- guin¹ adj. “ready, fresh”
- guin² adj. “own, held, possessed”
- guinir n. “slave”
- guinog n. “chattel”
- guinoth n. “property”
- guira- v. “to possess”
- Gul [ng-] n. “Gnome” see Golda
- gul- v. “to ooze, trickle”
- gulin adj. “patient, enduring, long suffering; (lit.) burdened”
- gulta- v. “to pour out (tr.)”
- gultha- v. “to bear up; to weigh, balance it on scales; to be worth, value or be equivalent to; to endure”
- gulweg n. “*Gnomish man” see golweg
- gulwin n. “*Gnomish woman” see golwin
- gum- v. “to lade”
- gûm n. “burden”
- gumlaith n. “weariness of spirit, depression, grief”
- gumri n. “burden (metaphoric), worry, trouble”
- gumriol adj. “burdensome”
- gund n. “boil, pus”
- gung n. “spider”
- gunn n. “?dragon”
- gur adj. “sweet” see gûri
- gûri adj. “sweet”
- gurmir n. “drink of the Valar, *(lit.) sweet wine”
- gurth(u) n. “death”
- gusta- v. “to burn (tr.), destroy”
- #gw- pref. “negative prefix” see u-
- gwa- pref. “together, in one; with” see go-¹
- gwâ n. “wind”
- gwachest n. “brother and brother, brother and sister, etc.” see gochest
- gwâd n. “stranger, foreigner, traveller”
- gwada- v. “to wander, roam, travel (far)”
- gwadath(wen) n. “wandering, journey”
- gwadh- v. “to dwell”
- gwadhra adj. “habitable”
- gwadhril n. “inhabitant (f.)”
- gwadhron n. “inhabitant (m.)”
- gwafel adj. and adv. “exactly alike” see gofel
- gwaid n. “kinsmen, relations; companion”
- gwaidhi n. “a rime (i.e. the 2 actual rhyming words)”
- gwaidhin n. “web”
- gwail n. “air”
- gwailtha- v. “to air; expose to air”
- gwais n. “kinship, relation”
- gwaith¹ n. “people”
- gwaith² (gwaith-) n. “semen”
- Gwala n. “one of the gods”
- gwalest n. “concourse, moot, folkmote”
- Gwalion n. “male god” see Gwalon
- gwalir n. “rime” see golairin
- Gwalir n. “female god” see Gwalthir
- Gwalon n. “male god”
- gwalt n. “good luck, any providential occurrence or thought”
- gwaltha n. “fortunate, happy”
- gwaltha- v. “bless, send good luck to”
- gwalthi n. “fortune, happiness”
- Gwalthir n. “female god”
- gwalwed n. “fortunate, happy” see gwaltha
- gwalwen n. “fortune, happiness” see gwalweth
- gwalweth n. “fortune, happiness”
- gwam n. “gust of wind”
- gwamod n. “companionship, living together; community, fellowship” see gomod
- gwandra adj. “beautiful”
- gwandreth n. “beauty”
- gwanin adj. “beautiful” see gwandra
- gwanos n. “family, birth, heredity”
- gwant adj. and n. “beautiful, fair; loveliness”
- gwanthi n. “fairness, beauty; a fair face, pretty”
- gwanwen n. “beauty” see gwandreth
- gwanweth n. “beauty” see gwandreth
- gwar-¹ v. “to watch (all senses), guard”
- gwar-² v. “*to dwell” see gwadh-
- gwardhos n. “m. companion, comrade” see gwar(e)dhon
- gwar(e)dhir n. “f. companion, comrade”
- gwar(e)dhon n. “m. companion, comrade”
- gwaren n. “family” see gwarin(n)
- gwarest n. “cousinhood, -ship”
- gwarestrin n. “watch-tower”
- gwareth n. “watch, guard, ward; vigilance”
- gwarieg n. “watchman, warden”
- gwarin n. “circle of trees” see gorin
- gwarin(n) n. “family”
- gwarth adj. “dead (only of persons)”
- gwâs n. “juice”
- gwass n. “rush, rushing, noise of rushing, splash”
- gwassiol adj. “rushing, noisy, loud, rustling or splashing”
- gwast n. “dwelling”
- gwavwed adj. “windy”
- gwe- pron. “you (plural), 2nd-plural pronoun”
- gwectha- v. “to impregnate, generate”
- gwed- v. “to wind, turn, bend (intr.)”
- gwed n. “*brook, small river” see gwent²
- gwedhweg adj. “meandering, twisting, winding; intricate”
- gwedhwin n. “bend, loop”
- gwedhwion adj. “bending, looping”
- gwef n. “louse”
- gweg n. “man, male of the Elda”
- gwegla adj. “crooked”
- gwegri n. “manhood (time or state)”
- gwegrin adj. “masculine”
- gwegwed adj. “male”
- gwegweth n. “male sex, manhood (state)”
- gwegwin n. “hermaphrodite”
- gwein n. “*woman” see gwin
- gweith n. “people” see gwaith¹
- gweithiad n. “nation, folk”
- gwel- v. “to boil; to bubble (intr.)”
- gwelaith n. “boil, bubble”
- gwelc n. “bubble”
- gweleb adj. “cool, fresh (esp. of water)”
- gweleth n. “boil, bubble” see gwelaith
- gweltha- v. “to squeeze, press”
- gwelwi n. “spring of water”
- gwem n. “worm”
- gwembel n. “weevil”
- gweml(i) n. “weevil” see gwembel
- gwenedh adj. “womanly?”
- gwenithli n. “maidenhood”
- gwen(n) adj. “big, large; fine”
- gwennin n. “girl”
- gwenniniol adj. “maiden(ly), girlish”
- gwent¹ adj. “big, large; fine” see gwen(n)
- gwent² n. “brook, small river”
- gwer- v. “to wind, turn, bend (tr.); to weave”
- gwerb(e)lin n. “top, whirligig, *(lit.) wind-unwind”
- gweron adj. “spun, rounded, cylindrical”
- gwert n. “a twist”
- gwes- v. “to greet, welcome”
- gwesol adj. “affable”
- gwest¹ n. “greeting, welcome, salute”
- gwest² n. “entertainment” see gwîs
- gwesta- v. “to entertain”
- gwethli n. “maiden, little girl”
- gwethlir n. “song of welcome”
- gwethra- v. “to bloom, flourish”
- gwethrin adj. “welcome, acceptable”
- gwethriol adj. “welcome, acceptable” see gwethrin
- gwi- pref. “twi-, bi-, di-”
- gwiaith n. “people, men” see ᴱN. gwaith
- gwidh- v. “to weave (tr.)”
- gwidh-a-ging n. “cobweb”
- gwidhin n. “woof”
- gwidhon adj. “woven”
- gwil- v. “to sail, float, fly”
- gwîl n. “cessation, quiescence, leaving off; peace”
- gwilb adj. “quiet, peaceful, full of peace”
- gwilbrin n. “butterfly”
- gwilbriniol adj. “like a butterfly”
- gwilith n. “breeze”
- gwilm n. “peace, quiet, rest; cessation”
- gwiltha- v. “to cease, leave off”
- gwilthi n. “peace”
- gwilvrin n. “butterfly” see gwilbrin
- gwilw adj. “quiet, peaceful” see gwilb
- gwim n. “spark, wink”
- gwimla- v. “to wink, twinkle”
- gwimpel n. “sparkling (n.), scintillation”
- gwin n. “woman, female”
- gwinc n. “spark, flash”
- gwindod n. “elder tree; elderberry”
- gwineth adj. “female”
- gwing n. “wave-crest, crest, foam”
- gwingil n. “foam maiden, mermaid”
- gwingli n. “loom”
- gwiniel n. “lady”
- gwiniol adj. “feminine”
- gwinios n. “womanhood (time or state)”
- gwinlaith n. “womanhood (time)”
- gwinn n. “net” see gwith
- gwint n. “face”
- gwinta- v. “to see”
- gwintha- v. “to face”
- gwinwed adj. “female”
- gwinwen n. “youth, freshness”
- gwinweth n. “female sex, womanhood (state)”
- gwiog adj. “young” see gwiw
- gwion adj. “young” see gwiw
- gwionert n. “deed of valour”
- gwioth n. “youth”
- gwir- v. “to look (at)”
- gwir¹ n. “master, lord, possessor”
- gwiril n. “*spindle”
- gwirith n. “expression, look (on face); look, regard, fixed look; countenance”
- gwirn adj. “unwished for, unwelcome”
- gwirth n. “unwillingness, reluctance”
- gwirtha- v. “*to not to wish, not mean to, mean not to”
- gwirthol adj. “reluctant”
- gwîs n. “entertainment”
- gwist n. “weft”
- gwista- v. “to be ignorant of, not to know”
- gwith n. “net”
- gwithadr n. “shuttle”
- gwithant n. “shuttle” see gwithadr
- gwivrin adj. “barren”
- gwiw adj. “young”
- habach n. “big shoe, clog, sabot”
- habin n. “shoe”
- hacha n. “the hams, buttocks”
- had prep. “facing, opposite, over against; (c. allative) against, instead of, in return for, for, as”
- had- pref. “for-, in return for, back, instead of”
- hada- v. “to throw at, aim at”
- hadang n. “javelin, (lit.) hurling iron”
- hadha- v. “to cling, cleave to; to wait on, wait for, abide with patience”
- hadhol adj. “abiding; enduring, constant, faithful”
- hadra- v. “to face, oppose, stand in way; to resist, thwart”
- hadra adj. “opposing, facing, opposite; equivalent”
- hadron prep. and adv. “opposite”
- hadruith n. “revenge”
- hadruithog adj. “thirsting for vengeance”
- hadruithol adj. “vengeful”
- hadung n. “javelin, (lit.) hurling iron” see hadang
- hag- v. “to sit, sit down”
- hagra adj. “seated”
- hai¹ adv. “there (by him)”
- hai² adv. “in good time, punctually, early”
- hai³ interj. “go!, hence, begone, away”
- haid n. “way, road, path” see haig
- haidra adv. “timely, punctual, in good time”
- haidri n. “forenoon, after breakfast”
- haig n. “way, road, path”
- haim adj. “gone, departed, lost” see haithin
- haimadri adj. “lunch, food in morning, elevens”
- hair adj. “timely, punctual, in good time”
- haitha- v. “to hie, go, fare, walk”
- haithin adj. “gone, departed, lost”
- haiva interj. and adv. “hence!, begone, be off; (as av.) away, hence, off”
- hal(a)- v. “to drag, draw, pull”
- halcha- v. “to drag on ground (roughly)”
- halm n. “draught, draft, drawing (of fishes etc.)”
- halthi n. “sheath”
- ham n. “ground, level of Earth’s service [surface]”
- hamra adj. “lowly, lowlying; base”
- hamra- v. “to abase, abash; to humble oneself”
- †hanna- v. “to mow, cleave”
- hant¹ adv. “thither”
- hant² n. “throw, cast; turn or move in games”
- hantha- v. “to fling, hurl, aim at, direct”
- hara n. “flesh meat, meat”
- harach n. “she-wolf”
- harc n. “flesh (on a living body)”
- harog n. “wolf”
- harw n. “wolf” see harog
- has- pref. “close to, by, beside, touching” see hath-
- hast n. “waiting, wait, pause, rest, stop”
- hasta- v. “to tarry, wait, pause, stay, stop”
- hath- pref. “close to, by, beside, touching”
- hau- v. “to lie”
- haug adj. “low”
- haugrin adj. “lowly, humble, mean”
- haurost n. “dawn”
- haus n. “bed”
- hautha- v. “to lay, stretch out, lay flat on ground”
- hauthwaid n. “consort, wife or husband”
- hauthwais n. “matrimony, conjugal rights”
- heb prep. “round about, around”
- heb- v. “to bind, bind round”
- hebon adj. “bound; (also) bounded, surrounded”
- hebrim n. “bound(ary)”
- hebwirol adj. “circumspect”
- hel- v. “to freeze”
- helc¹ adj. “ice-cold, icy, cold”
- helc² n. “ice” see heleg
- heleg n. “ice”
- helfileg n. “frost on panes, etc.”
- helfingl n. “icicle”
- helfin(n) n. “icicle” see helfingl
- helon adj. “frozen”
- heloth n. “frost”
- heltha- v. “to freeze, congeal (tr.)”
- helw adj. “ice-cold, icy, cold” see helc¹
- hemp n. “a band, bond; cord”
- hen n. “eye”
- hent n. “eyesight”
- herma n. “protection, lordship, sway”
- hermin n. “realm, tutelage”
- hermon n. “lord”
- hesc adj. “withered, dead; chilled, chill”
- Hess n. “winter”
- hest n. “brother or sister, *sibling; †consanguinity”
- hestri n. “consanguinity”
- †heth¹ n. “brother or sister”
- heth² adj. “white, pallid, wan”
- hetheglon n. “daisy”
- hethgadwi n. “twins”
- hethgedwi n. “twins” see hethgadwi
- hethir n. “sister”
- hethos n. “brother”
- hethren n. “first cousin (m.)”
- hethres n. “first cousin (f.)”
- hethri n. “consanguinity” see hestri
- hethrin adj. “of the same family (in a close sense), consanguine”
- hîl n. “frost”
- hilm n. “posterity; one’s descendants, progeny, offspring”
- hilming n. “inheritance, heritage”
- hilmir n. “heir (m. or f.)”
- hilon adj. “adolescent” see hilwed
- hiltha n. “youth (more often masculine)”
- hilwed adj. “adolescent”
- hîr n. “care, anxiety; heed”
- hiril n. “princess, †queen”
- hirilwen n. “anxiety”
- hiriol adj. “anxious”
- hiron n. “guardian, overseer, lord, master” see hiros
- hiros n. “guardian, overseer, lord, master”
- hirtha- v. “to care for, mind, tend; to care, reck, mind”
- hirthol adj. “careful, attentive”
- hist n. “listening, attention”
- hista- v. “to listen, hearken, listen to” see hitha-
- hith interj. “listen! hark!”
- hitha- v. “to listen, hearken, listen to”
- hithadrin adj. see hilwed
- hodhir n. “hope”
- hôm n. “ground, base, bottom, seabed”
- ho(n)- pref. “grandson of”
- honn n. “heart”
- hôr adj. “old, aged, ancient”
- horoth adj. “age, eld, oldness”
- hortha- v. “to grow old”
- horweg n. “an ancient, old man”
- hosta- v. “to gather, collect”
- hôth (hôdh-) n. “expectation, hope”
- hoth n. “folk, people, †army”
- hothri n. “army”
- hothrim n. “army” see hothri
- hothron n. “captain”
- hû n. “dog”
- hûbi n. “hound”
- hugin n. “young pig”
- huil n. “bitch, *female dog”
- huir adj. “foggy”
- huith n. “fog”
- huitha- v. “it is misty”
- hulc adj. “naked”
- hum adv. “(right) down, (lit.) to bottom”
- hum- v. “to sleep, drowze”
- hûm n. “sleep, slumber”
- humethla n. “(red) poppy” see hum(i)los
- hum(i)los n. “(red) poppy”
- humiol adj. “sleepy, drowzy”
- humloth n. “(red) poppy” see hum(i)los
- hûn n. “bone”
- hunc n. “pig”
- huniol adj. “bony, rawboned”
- hunn n. “boil, pus” see gund
- hunt n. “nose, nostrils, snout”
- hûs n. “crowd, heap, pile; very great number”
- husta- v. “to burn (tr.), destroy” see gusta-
- hŷr n. “sun”
- hyrost n. “*dawn”
- -i suf. “dative suffix”
- i article. “the”
- í pron. “indefinite indeclinable relative particle”
- -iant(ha) suf. “*superlative” see -iont(ha)
- ictha- v. “to egg on, excite, arouse, agitate”
- †îd n. “treasure, thing of great worth, jewel” see idri
- idhr(a) adv. “long, a long time”
- idhraluin adv. “long ago” see in(d)raluin
- idhril n. “*Man (f.)” see idhwin
- idhrog n. “*Man (m.)” see idhweg
- idhruglin n. “the language of Men”
- idhweg n. “*Man (m.)”
- idhwin n. “*Man (f.)”
- idra- v. “to value, prize”
- idra adj. “dear, valued, precious”
- idreth n. “value, dearness”
- idri n. “treasure, thing of great worth, jewel”
- idril n. “sweetheart”
- idrisaith n. “excessive love of gold and gems and beautiful and costly things”
- #-iel suf. “name suffix”
- ig n. “excitement, fuss, ado”
- igin adj. “excited, agitated”
- igli n. “young of fish, small fry”
- igol adj. “exciting; excitable”
- il- pref. “the opposite, the reversal”
- -il suf. “feminine agent” see #-(r)il
- ilbar n. “heaven, the uttermost region beyond the world”
- ilbrant n. “rainbow”
- ilbrin adj. “oily, fat, greasy”
- il(d)rim n. “unquiet, disturbance; disease”
- ilf n. “heart”
- ilgiol adj. “barren”
- ilgioth n. “sterility”
- ilm n. “oil, fat, grease”
- ilon n. “sky”
- ilrimog adj. “uneasy”
- ilt- v. “to yoke, join”
- ilta- v. “to stick in, prod, prick”
- iltanc adj. “unsteady”
- ilt(h)a- v. “to yoke, join” see ilt-
- ilvrant n. “rainbow” see ilbrant
- ilwi(n) n. “sky, heavens” see ilwint
- ilwint n. “sky, heavens; (lit.) face of god”
- im n. “fairy”
- im¹ pron. “I”
- in n. “go, move, turn, occasion”
- in- pref. “house of”
- -in¹ suf. “plural suffix”
- -in² suf. “adjective ending”
- inc adj. “little”
- -inci suf. “diminutive superlative”
- inco pron. “the same, the identical”
- ind n. “house, abode”
- indor n. “master (of house), lord”
- indos n. “house, hall”
- ind(r) adv. “long, a long time” see idhr(a)
- in(d)ra adj. “long (also used of time)”
- in(d)raluin adv. “long ago”
- in(d)wed adj. “indoors, at home; homely, domestic(ated)”
- ineg adj. “small” see inig
- ing n. “fish”
- inig adj. “small”
- inn n. “house, abode” see ind
- inna adv. “in home, to its house/its right place”
- inni adv. “home, at home, in right place”
- innor n. “master (of house), lord” see indor
- innos n. “house, hall” see indos
- int¹ n. “way, path, track”
- int² adv. “in home, to its house/its right place” see inna
- intha-¹ v. “to join to (intr.), add, increase, add to”
- intha-² v. “to go (indefinite), fare, proceed”
- inthi adv. “less”
- -inthir suf. “diminutive”
- inthorn n. “eagle’s nest, eyrie”
- inweg n. “*fairy (male)”
- inwin n. “*fairy (female)”
- -iof suf. “-bearing”
- #-(i)ol suf. “adjective suffix”
- iol n. “lamb”
- iolinc n. “little lamb, lambkin”
- #-(i)on suf. “adjectival suffix”
- -iont(ha) suf. “*superlative”
- †ior n. “eagle”
- ioroth n. “eagle”
- #-ios suf. “abstract noun” see #-os¹
- ir prep. “dative and allative”
- îr- v. “to be willing; to will, intend to, mean to”
- #-ir suf. “agental suffix” see #-or
- irm n. “a wish, intention, resolve”
- irn adj. “desired, wished for”
- irt n. “beak (of small birds)”
- irtha pron. “her”
- irtha- v. “to peck”
- irthod n. “intent, intention, will”
- irthol adj. “intentional”
- ist n. “feeling, sensation; notion”
- ista- v. “to know, be aware, perceive, feel”
- -ith suf. “abstract noun” see #-(o)th
- ith¹ n. “fine snow”
- ith² n. “anything”
- itheg n. “anything” see ith²
- ithog adj. “any”
- ithrin adj. “of any kind”
- ithriol adj. “of any kind” see ithrin
- ithweg n. “anyone”
- ithwin n. “anyone” see ithweg
- ivangod n. “walnut”
- ivogodron n. “walnut tree”
- ivongod n. “walnut” see ivangod
- ivrin adj. “fertile”
- lâ n. “space, room, place”
- #-la¹ suf. “verbal suffix”
- #-la² suf. “noun suffix”
- laboth n. “a hare”
- labra adj. “loose, lax, flapping; weak”
- lactha- v. “(tr.) gather together, collect, amass”
- lad n. “a level, a flat; fair dealing”
- lada- v. “to smooth out, stroke, caress, soothe, beguile”
- ladin adj. “level, smooth; fair, equitable”
- ladinios n. “equity”
- ladog n. “tin”
- ladwen n. “levelness, flatness; plain, heath; plane; surface”
- laf n. “loose-end, end of rope, hem of robe”
- lag- v. “to gather up, pick up, get”
- laib adj. “green”
- laibrin adj. “green, fresh, youthful”
- laigos n. “verdure, greenness”
- laim n. “thong, rope”
- lais n. “green sward, glade”
- laith¹ n. “time, the course of time; (properly) lapse”
- #laith² adj. “*lost”
- laithra adj. “dead and gone, over, former, of yore, forgotten”
- laith(r)a- v. “to let slip, lose, mislay, forget; (intr.) to be lost”
- lalm n. “elm, elm-wood”
- lalmir n. “elm tree”
- lalt n. “dance”
- laltha- v. “to dance”
- lam n. “tongue, speech”
- lanc n. “chance; pick, choice, selection”
- land adj. and n. “broad”
- lang- v. “to blare, clang, ring”
- langon n. “great bell”
- lann adj. and n. “broad” see land
- lant n. “(high) road, level way, street”
- lantha- v. “to fall onto, settle on, alight”
- laptha- v. “to relax, loosen”
- larm n. “elm, elm-wood” see lalm
- las- v. “to look at, glance at”
- lasgweloth n. “leaf-fading, autumn”
- lass n. “leaf; petal”
- last n. “look, glance, flash of the eye”
- lasta- v. “blink, wink”
- lath n. “year”
- laub n. “shirt”
- laud n. “flood; high tide; tide, motion of the sea”
- laug adj. “(of plants) alive, having sap, green, vigorous”
- laur adj. “threatening, foreboding, darkling”
- laus n. and adj. “juice, sap; energy, vitality; (aj.) fresh”
- lauth n. “a plant, herb”
- lauthra- v. “to refresh; to revive (intr.)”
- lav- v. “to lick”
- lavra- v. “to lap (of animals), suck up”
- †le prep. “and” see li
- leb- v. “to pick, pluck, take or feel or touch with fingers, cull”
- lech¹ adj. “smooth, slippery”
- lech² n. “smooth place; slide”
- lectha- v. “to sharpen”
- leg adj. “keen, sharp, piercing” see (g)leg
- lemfadrin adj. and n. “of the finger; ring”
- lemfarilt n. “ring”
- lemfin adj. “halved, in half”
- lemp¹ n. “crooked finger; little finger”
- lemp² n. “half”
- lempa- v. “to beckon, crook the finger”
- lempachùn n. “wishbone”
- len adj. “come, arrived”
- len¹ adv. “wherewith, far, long, away”
- lenc adj. and adv. “far, distant”
- lenchos n. “distance”
- lendri n. “coming, arrival” see lenthos
- lendriol adj. “coming, approaching”
- lent adv. “near, close to, up by, along side of; (c. dat.) at, towards, up to side of; therewith, with it, withal”
- lentha- v. “to come towards speaker, approach, draw near”
- lenthol adj. “coming, approaching”
- lenthos n. “coming, arrival”
- lenu- v. “to stretch, extend in length, trail; ?to approach”
- lenweg n. “‘arrival’, a stranger”
- lenwi n. “length, distance”
- lenwin n. “‘arrival’, a stranger (fem.)” see lenweg
- leptha n. “finger”
- lepthadrin adj. “fingered, of fingers”
- lepthindros adj. “fingered, of fingers” see lepthadrin
- lest n. “gathering, assembly, concourse, moot”
- lesta- v. “to gather, assemble, meet (intr.)”
- leth adv. “therewith, with it, withal”
- lethrin adj. “slippery, peril(o)us”
- li prep. “with; and”
- #-li suf. “noun suffix”
- lî n. “folk, many people, ‘they’, a crowd of folk”
- lib n. “drop, gout”
- lib- v. “to drip”
- libli n. “small glass; small drop”
- lieg n. “the folk, the citizens”
- lieglest n. “a folk moot”
- ligin n. “curved horn, trump”
- ligindon n. “blare of trumps”
- lillir n. “a song, lullaby”
- -lim suf. “many”
- lim¹ adj. “many”
- lim² n. “sheaf, bundle”
- limfa n. “drink of the fairies”
- limfelis n. “drink of the fairies” see limfa
- limp(elis) n. “drink of the fairies”
- lin- v. “to sound (intr.)”
- lin n. “sound”
- lind n. “twine”
- lindwil n. see glindwil
- ling n. “small snake”
- lingos n. “snake”
- lingwir n. “dragon”
- lint adj. “quick, agile, nimble, light”
- lintha- v. “to sound (tr.), strike or ring bell, play an instrument”
- linthanin n. “playing or music of instruments”
- -liont suf. “*tendril”
- lir- v. “to sing”
- lisc n. “reed, sedge” see lisg
- liscaloth adj. “reedy, reed grown”
- lisg n. “reed, sedge”
- list n. “grace, favour, kindness”
- lista- v. “to bless”
- lith- v. “to go, depart, be over, finish, end, die”
- lithin adj. “bygone, ended”
- lithra- v. “to cease speaking, become silent”
- lô n. “pool, lake”
- lob- v. “to run, gallop (of animals)”
- lobrob n. “gallop; sound of horse’s feet”
- lobros n. “steed, horse”
- loctha n. “twist, tendril, spiral, coil”
- loctha- v. “to curl (tr.), bend, wind, twine, tie knot, tangle”
- lôda- v. “to smooth out, stroke, caress, soothe, beguile” see lada-
- loda- v. “to swallow, gulp down”
- log- v. “to curl (intr.), bend (intr.), wind (twine round anything), twine”
- lôg n. “fuel, firewood”
- logrifidhrin adj. “curly haired”
- logrifindel adj. “curly haired” see logrifidhrin
- logrin adj. “curled, curly”
- lôm n. “gloom, shade”
- lómin adj. and n. “shady, shadowy, gloomy; gloom(iness)”
- lomiol adj. “dismal”
- lonc n. “curl”
- lor- v. “to sleep deep, dream (tr.)”
- lorc adj. “drowsy, dreamy, lazy”
- lortha- v. “to put to sleep, send to sleep”
- lorwen n. “slumber, sleep”
- lôs n. “flower”
- losbas n. “ryebread”
- losc n. “rye”
- losg n. “rye” see losc
- loss n. “blossom, bloom” see lost
- lost n. “blossom, bloom”
- -loth suf. “-grown”
- lothli n. “floret”
- lu n. “occasion, time”
- lub n. “fat, fat flesh”
- lubi adj. “corpulent”
- lud- v. “to flow, stream, float”
- lûda- v. “to bloom, grow”
- lûg n. “snake”
- lûgi n. “a wind, a twist; guile, deceit”
- lui n. “blueness, livor, livid mark”
- luib adj. “thirsty”
- luibri n. “thirst” see luist
- luim adj. “blue”
- luin¹ adj. and adv. “gone, past; ago”
- luin² adj. “blue” see luim
- luis n. “florescence, blooming”
- luist n. “thirst”
- luista- v. “to be thirsty; to parch, dry up”
- luitha- v. “to bloom, blossom”
- luithon n. “sky”
- lul- v. “to sing, hum a lullaby”
- lulwi n. “a lullaby”
- lum n. “cloud”
- lûm n. “time”
- lumba adj. “overcast” see lumbrin
- lumbri n. “foul weather”
- lumbrin adj. “overcast”
- lung n. “heavy; grave, serious”
- lungra- v. “to weigh, bear on, hang heavy”
- lunta n. “ship”
- luntha- v. “to balance, weigh”
- lunthang n. “balance, scales”
- lur- v. “to frown, scowl”
- lûr n. “slumber”
- lurc n. “a frown, scowl”
- lust n. “weather; tide; time”
- lûtha- v. “to pass (of time); to come to pass, occur”
- luv- v. “to hang, lower (of clouds)”
- ma prep. “with instrument or by agent”
- mab n. “hand(s)”
- mab(a) n. “mother”
- mabinos n. “plane tree”
- mabinos gwilbriniol n. “sycamore”
- mabir n. “mother” see mab(a)
- mablad n. “palm of the hand”
- mablios adj. “cunning”
- mablod n. “palm of the hand” see mablad
- mabol adj. “skilful”
- mabrin(d) n. “wrist”
- mabwed adj. “handed, having hands, dextrous”
- mabwedri n. “dexterity”
- macha n. “slaughter, battle”
- mactha- v. “to slay, kill”
- mad- v. “to eat”
- mâd n. “meal”
- madheg n. “something”
- madhin adj. “some”
- madhir n. “someone (f.)”
- madhon n. “someone (m.)”
- madri n. “food, edibles; a meal”
- madrin adj. “edible, fit for food, wholesome”
- madriol adj. “edible, fit for food, wholesome” see madrin
- magli n. “great sword”
- magru n. “slaughter, battle”
- magruluib adj. “bloodthirsty”
- magruluist n. “bloodthirstiness”
- magrusaig adj. “bloodthirsty”
- magrusaith n. “bloodthirstiness”
- mai adv. “well”
- maidhon n. “midday”
- maien adj. “better”
- maig adj. “thirst”
- maiglos adj. see maig
- ‽mail n. “flour”
- maimelion adj. “dearly beloved”
- main adv. “better”
- †mair n. “horse”
- mairien adj. “better” see maien
- mairos n. “mane, long hair”
- †mais n. “gore”
- maith n. “rule, power, permission”
- maitha- v. “to rule, govern, wield control, hold”
- maithog adj. “having control”
- maithri n. “control”
- maivenin adj. “shapely”
- maiwest n. “welcome”
- maiwethrin adj. “welcome”
- mal- v. “to chew”
- mal¹ n. “paved way, road”
- mal² adj. see bal
- malc¹ adj. “rich, powerful”
- malc² n. “lord”
- malcos n. “lordship, power, a province or principality”
- malcrin adj. “lordly, noble, mighty”
- malcwed adj. “lordly, noble, mighty” see malcrin
- maloglin n. “yellow song, daffodil”
- malogrintha adj. “orange, tawny”
- malon adj. “yellow”
- maltha adj. “golden yellow, rich, mellow”
- malthin n. “cream”
- malthos n. “butter cup”
- mam n. “grandmother, mother”
- (m)ami n. “mummy”
- manc n. “grip, grasp, hold”
- manca- v. “to grab, seize”
- mandra adj. “noble”
- mang n. “butter”
- mani adj. “good (of men and character only), holy”
- manos n. “spirit that has gone to the Valar”
- mar n. “Earth, ground, soil”
- mara- v. “to dwell”
- mara n. “sand” see marol
- maragwast n. “earth quake”
- maroglin n. “yellow song, daffodil” see maloglin
- marol n. “sand”
- mar(o)n adj. “ripe”
- maros n. “ripe fruit”
- martion adj. “fated, doomed, fey”
- mart(os) n. “fate, portion, lot”
- masgar n. “pasture”
- mast n. “feed, food, nourishment; fodder”
- masta- v. “to feed, graze”
- mastir n. “*shepherdess”
- math n. “dusk”
- mathrin adj. “dusk, dusky”
- mathron n. “herd, herdsman, shepherd”
- mathusgi n. “twilight”
- mathwen n. “evening”
- mau adv. “soon, early”
- maudra- v. “be early, come first; to prefer, to be preferred”
- maudri n. “early morn before dawn, time before first meal”
- maudrimad n. “breakfast”
- maudrin adj. “early, betimes, up early; premature” see maurin
- maudro adv. “sooner, earlier; rather”
- maug adj. “silent”
- †maugli adj. “secret, hidden”
- maul n. “the lowing of cattle, bellowing”
- maur n. “dream, vision”
- maurin adj. “early, betimes, up early; premature”
- maus n. and adj. “pleasure; pleasant taste, pleasant”
- mav- v. “to like”
- mavlant n. “*palm (of hand)”
- mavlantos n. “sycamore”
- mavra adj. “eager after”
- mavri n. “appetite”
- mavrin adj. “delectable, delightful, desireable”
- mavrog adj. “eager”
- mavros n. “desire, eager longing”
- mavrothwed adj. “delectable, delightful, desireable” see mavrin
- mavuin n. “ancestress, †mother” see mavwin¹
- mavwen n. “ancestress, †mother” see mavwin¹
- mavwin¹ n. “ancestress, †mother”
- mavwin² n. “wish”
- mawr adj. “good” see mora
- (m)bara- v. “to dwell” see mara-
- me- pron. “we, 1st-plural pronoun”
- mechor n. “gore”
- mectha n. “goal, intention”
- mectha- v. “to aim at; to intend, mean”
- mecthos n. “meaning”
- meg n. “any small animal; (esp.) mole”
- mel- v. “to love”
- meleth n. “love”
- melethli n. “darling, sweetheart”
- melethril n. “lover”
- melethron n. “lover”
- melon adj. “dear, beloved”
- meltha adj. “dear, beloved” see melon
- mem n. “mouth”
- miaug n. “tomcat”
- miaulin n. “she-cat”
- mib n. “little kiss, peck”
- mibli n. “little kiss, peck” see mib
- mictha- v. “to kiss, bill”
- migin adj. “little”
- miginthi n. “littleness”
- mim n. “gum”
- min num. card. “one, single”
- mindon n. “tower”
- mineth n. “island”
- mintha adj. “ūna, in one place, together”
- minthon n. “tower” see mindon
- miog n. “cat”
- mîr n. “wine”
- mirobin n. “grape”
- mirofor n. “drink of the Gods”
- miros n. “wine”
- mirwelthin n. “vintage”
- mô n. “hand”
- mod n. “a number, figure”
- modog adj. “*a large number” see modwen
- modra- v. “count, measure”
- modri n. “measurement”
- modrog adj. “rich man” see modron¹
- modron¹ adj. “rich man”
- modwen adj. “a large number”
- mog- v. “to detest, hate”
- mogri n. “detestation”
- mogrin adj. “hateful”
- môl n. “the (inside of the) mouth”
- molnaith n. “molar”
- môn n. “bare hill, knoll”
- môna n. “spirits of the air”
- môni n. “spirits of the air” see môna
- mora adj. “good”
- morc n. and adj. “stain, smut, black mark; dirty”
- mord n. “man, warrior; †shepherd” see mort
- morn adj. “dark, black”
- mort n. “warrior, champion, hero; man; †sword, †shepherd”
- morth n. “darkness”
- mortha adj. “dim”
- môs n. “food (of men)”
- moth n. “sheep”
- moth(in) n. “1000; †flock”
- mothweg n. “shepherd”
- mothwen n. “1000; †flock” see moth(in)
- mû n. “ox”
- mu¹ prep. “[?] flow; from”
- mu² prep. “will, am going to, am about to” see mutha
- mug- v. “to keep silent, say nothing (about)”
- mugli n. “calf”
- mugol adj. “taciturn”
- mugwen adj. “secret”
- mui n. “cat” see miog
- muig adj. “soft, gentle”
- muil n. “tarn”
- muin¹ adj. “safe, secure”
- muin² n. “kine, cattle”
- muinos n. “security”
- muir n. “heifer”
- muis n. “softness, tenderness, gentleness”
- mul- v. “to low, bellow”
- mum- v. “to low, bellow” see mul-
- mûm n. “lowing”
- mumla- v. “stammer, gibber”
- mumloth n. “stuttering”
- mumol adj. “stammering, gibbering, inarticulate”
- munc n. “shut mouth, silence, secretiveness; (aj.) mum”
- mur- v. “*to slumber, sleep”
- murc n. “a nightmare, vision of the night”
- mûri n. “darkness, †night”
- murtha- v. “to dream”
- mûs n. “cow”
- musc adj. “grey”
- mûst n. “byre, cowhouse”
- mutha prep. “will, am going to, am about to”
- mútha- v. “to depart, go, leave; (c. gen.) to leave the place of or time of speaker; to go forward”
- muthli n. “heifer” see muir
- muthra- v. “to veil”
- -n suf. “genitive suffix”
- na- v. “to be”
- na prep. “of (the)”
- nab- v. “to take, lay hold of”
- nabos n. “seizure”
- naboth n. “seizure” see nabos
- nactha- v. “bite”
- nacthanaith n. “incisor (tooth)”
- nâd n. “grandfather” see dâd
- nad n. “*thing”
- (n)ada n. “daddy, father”
- (n)adi n. “father, daddy” see (n)ada
- naf- v. “to suspect, have inkling of”
- nafa n. “suspicion, inkling”
- nafol adj. “suspicious (subjective)”
- nafra- v. “to nose about in others’ business”
- nag- v. “to chew, gnaw”
- naith n. “tooth”
- naitha- v. “to lament, weep, wail for, make moan for”
- naithol adj. “miserable”
- naithonwi n. “misery”
- nal¹ n. “dale, vale”
- nal² adv. “down, downwards”
- nâla n. “yellow-lily”
- nalairin n. “iris”
- naldron adj. “lower down”
- nalos n. “sinking, setting, descent, slope”
- naltha adj. “downward, lower, lower-down; (av.) below, beneath”
- nam- v. “withdraw, draw out, draw back, take back; (intr.) withdraw, retire”
- nan prep. “of” see na
- nân¹ n. “mother”
- nân² n. “*thing” see nad
- nanc n. “bite”
- nand n. “field acre”
- nandor n. “farmer”
- nandri n. “the country (as opposed to town)”
- nandriol adj. “rustic, rural”
- nann n. “field acre” see nand
- nanweg n. “*farmer” see nandor
- nanwin n. “mother” see nân¹
- naptha- v. “to seize”
- narcolas n. “the fall of the leaf, Autumn”
- narcos n. “rot, decay”
- narp adj. “rotten, decayed, corrupt; overripe”
- narth n. “odour”
- narthiel n. “fragrance”
- narthol adj. “fragrant, odorous”
- nast n. “being (abstract); being (creature)”
- nath n. “thing, affair, matter”
- nathanwi n. “fatherhood”
- nathon n. “father”
- nathrin adj. “real; possible (in sense possible to exist or think of)”
- naud adj. “bowed, bent; ashamed, abashed, bashful”
- naudra- v. “to abash, to make ashamed”
- naug n. “dwarf”
- naugla adj. “of or belonging to the dwarves”
- nauglafel adj. “mean, avaricious, (lit.) dwarf-natured”
- naugli n. “dwarf”
- nauin adj. “dwarf” see naugla
- naur¹ adj. “ill-tempered, sour, grumbling”
- naur² n. “a snarl, ugly grin”
- naus adj. and n. “keen-witted, observant; notice”
- nautha- v. “to hint at, give a hint to”
- necha n. “woe”
- nectha n. “honey comb”
- neglis n. “honey”
- nel n. “point, end, tip, jutting end”
- ‽nelu- v. “ring (tr. & intr.)”
- nendil n. “waterfay”
- nen(n) n. “water; river”
- nennil n. “waterfay” see nendil
- nermil n. “a fay that haunts the meadows and riverbanks”
- nern n. “brook”
- nert n. “prowess, a feat, strength”
- nerthi n. “manhood, manliness; virtue”
- nerthog adj. “stout, vigorous, doughty”
- ness n. “water meadow; long grass”
- nesta- v. “to put to grass, graze, pasture, feed”
- nethli n. “long lush grass, little meadow”
- nethron n. “herd”
- (n)gôl n. “slaughter”
- ni- pron. “I, 1st-singular pronoun”
- ni prep. “without (both senses)”
- nib n. “snowflake”
- nictha- v. “to rain, hail, snow”
- niel n. “granddaughter”
- nien(n) n. “tear” see nîn
- nifedhin adj. and n. “outlaw, outcast”
- nig- v. “to steal, creep, do or go by stealth”
- nigla- v. “to thieve, pilfer”
- nig(la) n. “mouse”
- †nigor n. “rain, rainy weather”
- nigrim n. “to swarm” see niogrim
- nigrin adj. “stealthy”
- nigweth n. “(snow) storm”
- nigwin adj. “rainy”
- nil adj. “empty”
- nilta- v. “to empty (tr.)”
- niltha- v. “to empty (tr.)” see nilta-
- nim adj. “pale blue, blue green”
- nimp adj. “pallid”
- nîn n. “tear”
- †nîn² n. “pool”
- ninconin n. “snowdrop”
- nind n. “blue stone, turquoise”
- ninghonin n. “*snowdrop” see ninconin
- ninion n. “water lily”
- ninios n. “lamentation, dropping of tears”
- ninn n. “blue stone, turquoise” see nind
- ninna- v. “to weep”
- nintha- v. “to weep” see ninna-
- niogrim n. “swarm”
- nion¹ n. “grandson”
- nion² n. “bee” see nio(s)
- nio(s) n. “bee”
- niost n. “hive”
- niosturwin n. “queen bee”
- #-(n)ir suf. “(feminine) agent”
- nir pref. “grandchild of”
- nîr¹ n. “grief, sorrow”
- †nîr² n. “woman”
- nîriol adj. “sad, sorrowing”
- nirnaithos n. “great lament”
- nith n. “wax”
- nitha n. “a candle”
- nithla n. “candlestick”
- niwin n. “female bee”
- no adv. “then, next, again; then, after(wards)”
- no- pref. “re-, back, again”
- nobra- v. “to follow, go after”
- nobromath n. “‘second twilight’, first signs of dawn”
- nobron n. “the second, next following”
- nocha n. “acorn”
- nochinra adj. “long-acorned”
- nod adv. “forward, on, in advance”
- nodro adv. “farther on, further forward, later, again”
- nôf n. “suspicion, inkling” see nafa
- nog n. “hill, knob, prominence”
- nogin n. “boy, lad, urchin”
- nogra- v. “to excell, exceed”
- nogrin adj. “excellent, conspicuous”
- nogriol adj. “excellent, conspicuous” see nogrin
- nôl n. “head”
- nôn n. “tomorrow, the next day on from one mentioned or in thought, the morrow”
- nontha adj. “the next, the succeeding (time only)”
- nor- v. “to run, roll”
- norn n. “wheel”
- northa- v. “to send rolling, speed”
- nos n. “kin, people”
- nôs n. “birthday; nature”
- nosc adj. “damp, wet”
- nosied n. “kinsman”
- noss¹ n. “rain”
- noss² n. “birthday” see nôs
- nost n. “birth; blood, high birth; birthday”
- nosta- v. “to be born”
- nosteg adj. “birth”
- noth¹ adj. “damp, wet” see nosc
- noth² n. “rain” see noss¹
- nothri n. “family, kinship”
- nothrin adj. “highborn noble”
- nud- v. “to incline head, bend face down”
- nûda adj. “prone, face down”
- nudin adj. “prone”
- nuf- v. “to get smell of, perceive scent of, smell (tr.)”
- nufleg adj. “keen-nosed” see nuthleg
- nufli n. “sense of smell” see nufri
- nufri n. “sense of smell”
- nui adv. “afterwards, again, later”
- nuidro adv. “still later”
- nuimath n. “‘second twilight’, first signs of dawn”
- nuimoth n. “‘second twilight’, first signs of dawn” see nuimath
- nuin adj. “born”
- nuiri n. “afternoon”
- num- v. “to sink, decline, slope down, descend”
- numbros n. “incline, slope”
- nûmin adj. “the west, sinking”
- nûn n. “a nose (of men only)”
- nunta- v. “to assent”
- nunthi adv. “downward”
- nûr adj. “smooth, rolling free, easy, easy going”
- nur- v. “to growl, grumble”
- nurn n. “plaint, lament, a complaint”
- nurna- v. “to bewail, lament, complain of”
- nus- v. “to take notice, perceive”
- nusimos n. “sagacity”
- nusiol adj. “sagacious”
- nusiothli n. “sagacity” see nusimos
- nûth n. “scent, ‘wind’, odour”
- nuthleg adj. “keen-nosed”
- nybol adj. “?snowy”
- o prep. “from” see a¹
- o- conj. “he”
- ô n. “the sea”
- ob prep. “after, close behind (time and place)”
- obaidra- v. “to expiate (crime), avenge”
- obauthri n. “afternoon”
- obin adj. “second, next”
- obra adj. “close behind (of place), following, succeeding, next behind or after (time or place)”
- obra- v. “to follow; to succeed”
- obromath n. “the twilight that follows the night, ‘second twilight’, just before dawn”
- obron adv. “*next”
- obruith n. “(evil) consequences”
- och n. “egg”
- ocha n. “fleece”
- ochlad n. “week”
- octha n. “knee”
- #-od suf. “noun suffix”
- od¹ prep. “at, up to, against”
- od² n. “sharp corner” see og²
- odin num. card. “seven (orig[inally] many)”
- odinthos num. card. “seventeen”
- odog adj. “mighty, great; violent, excessive, exceeding, very”
- odra adv. “very”
- odra- v. “am able, can”
- odrim adj. “(very) many”
- odrog adj. and n. “dour, mighty, stout, brave; a brave man” see odron
- odron adj. and n. “dour, mighty, stout, brave; a brave man”
- -odro(n) suf. “augmentative”
- odrum n. “hammer”
- ôf n. “hood”
- #-og suf. “adjectival suffix”
- og- v. “to be able, can”
- #-og² suf. “agental suffix”
- og² n. “sharp corner”
- oglad n. “week” see ochlad
- -oglo(n) suf. “augmentative” see -odro(n)
- ogor n. “might, power, ability”
- ogra- v. “to be able, can” see og-
- ogra prep. “able to”
- ogriol adj. “possible”
- ol n. “cliff, seaward precipice”
- ol- v. “to appear, seem”
- ôl¹ n. “forearm; bough”
- ôl² n. “height, stature”
- ôla n. “cliff, seaward precipice” see ol
- olaud n. “tide, motion of the sea” see olod
- olch adj. “bad” see ulc
- olf(in) n. “branch, wand, stick”
- olfin(g) n. “branch, wand, stick” see olf(in)
- olm n. “dream”
- olma- v. “to dream”
- olod n. “tide, motion of the sea”
- olor n. “dream, apparition, vision” see oloth
- oloth n. “dream, apparition, vision”
- oltha- v. “to appear as an apparition; to dream”
- ôm n. “mind, heart, thought”
- ômgulin adj. “patient”
- ômgulwen n. “patience”
- omla n. “a horse chestnut”
- omlos n. “(horse) chestnut tree”
- on pron. “he”
- #-on suf. “noun suffix”
- ôn¹ n. “crown of head, top”
- ôn² n. “gift”
- ong n. “great pain”
- ongos n. “anguish”
- -onta suf. “superlative”
- ontha pron. “his”
- #-or suf. “agental suffix”
- or adv. and prep. “(av.) on, on top; (prep.) on, onto”
- or- pref. “on, onto, up, in addition to”
- ôr n. “dry sand”
- orc n. “goblin”
- orcômin adj. “fierce and bloody minded”
- orf n. “apple”
- orfing n. “pear”
- orm n. “hill top, summit”
- ormagod n. “a (Spanish) chestnut”
- ormagodron n. “a (Spanish) chestnut tree”
- orn n. “tree”
- orod n. “mountain”
- oros n. “rising”
- orosaura n. “sunrise”
- orost n. “rising, sunrise” see oros
- ort n. “mountain” see orod
- ortha adj. “upper”
- orthi adv. “up”
- ôs n. “bog”
- ’ôs n. “[unglossed]”
- #-os¹ suf. “abstract noun”
- #-os² suf. “masculine suffix”
- osp(a) n. “foam”
- ospa- v. “to seethe, foam, spout”
- ospathol adj. “ebullient”
- ospoth n. “froth”
- oss n. “outer wall (with moat), town wall, moat”
- ost¹ n. “enclosure, yard; town”
- ost² n. “summer”
- ost³ pron. “yourselves”
- osta- v. “to surround with walls, build up, fortify, protect; to surround”
- ostor n. “enclosure, circuit of walls”
- ôth n. “hole, opening”
- oth pron. “ye”
- #-(o)th suf. “abstract noun”
- pâ- v. “to put”
- pactha- v. “to utter, speak, talk”
- pad n. “[unglossed]”
- padhra- v. “to skin, peel, flay” see pasta-
- padhwen n. “bark”
- padra- v. “to walk”
- paga n. “court, paved floor”
- paglant n. “a pavement, *paved road or way”
- paglos n. “parchment”
- pagra- v. “to pave”
- pagri n. “pavement”
- pagros n. “pavement” see pagri
- paib adj. “sour”
- paithri n. “a speech, speech, talk”
- paithron n. “orator”
- paithwen n. “oratory”
- palta- v. “to beat”
- paltha n. “blade (of swords, knives, oars, etc.); wide flat leaf; page of book”
- pan n. “arrangement, settlement; place, spot”
- pand n. “bark; book”
- pant n. “arrangement, grouping; book”
- panta- v. “to arrange, order, settle; to set, put, place; to write a book”
- paptha- v. “to tremble, quiver”
- past n. “skin”
- pasta- v. “to skin, peel, flay”
- path n. “peel, skin of fruit, fine bark (paper)”
- pau n. “a beard”
- pectha n. “plume”
- pecthon n. “plume, feather”
- †pel suf. “village, hamlet, -ham”
- pelectha- v. “to hew”
- peleg n. “axe”
- pelu- v. “to fence, enclose”
- pî n. “anything very small, a bit, mote”
- pibin n. “small berry, haw”
- pibinaith(ros) n. “hawthorn”
- pictha- v. “to make urine” see pigla-
- piectha- v. “to pin, prick”
- pieg n. “pin”
- pigla- v. “to make urine”
- piglin n. “urine”
- pigwa adj. “bitter”
- pigwed adj. “bitter” see pigwa
- piligwathil n. “feathering of an arrow”
- pilingwathil n. “feathering of an arrow” see piligwathil
- pilon n. “arrow, dart”
- pim n. “bead, any small round thing, seed”
- pinaithros n. “hawthorn” see pibinaith(ros)
- pinig adj. “tiny, little”
- piog n. “berry”
- plador n. “oar” see plados
- plados n. “oar”
- pleg n. “hedge-stake, stake”
- pless n. “hedge, fence”
- podod n. “potato”
- podra- v. “to turn round, turn back, retrace” see ponta-
- polc adj. “thick, fat”
- polm n. “strength (physical)”
- polmog adj. “strong (physically)”
- polod n. “power, might, authority”
- polodrin adj. “mighty”
- polwed adj. “strong (physically)” see polmog
- polwin n. “strength (physical)” see polm
- pont n. “the back, reverse or far side”
- ponta- v. “to turn round, turn back, retrace”
- porog n. “fowl (domestic)”
- porogog n. “the clucking and noise of fowls”
- porogwil n. “hen”
- praust n. “[unglossed]”
- pridu- v. “to decide”
- pridwen n. “judgment”
- pridwir n. “judge”
- prind n. “distinction”
- prog n. “[unglossed]”
- pruin n. “charcoal”
- pui n. “child”
- puibra- v. “to wash, cleanse, soap” see puidra-
- puictha- v. “to clean, wipe out; to condone, do away with, pardon, forgive”
- puidra- v. “to wash, cleanse, soap”
- puig adj. “clean, neat, tidy”
- puim n. “soap”
- puthli n. “baby”
- quing n. “bow” see cwing
- -r¹ suf. “plural in verbs”
- -r² suf. “dative suffix” see -i
- †râ n. “arm, strength”
- #-ra¹ suf. “adjective suffix”
- #-ra² suf. “verb suffix”
- rab- v. “[unglossed]”
- ractha- v. “to shatter”
- ractha n. “breach”
- rada n. “track, path, way”
- rag- v. “to break asunder, burst”
- raib adj. “scored, striped”
- raibrog n. “zebra”
- raibros n. “(female) zebra” see raibrog
- raig adj. “awry, twisted, distorted, perverse, wrong, leering (of face)”
- raim n. “edge, border-line”
- rain n. “anniversary, year complete”
- raina- v. “to return”
- raith n. “extent, reach; region, sphere, district; scope”
- raitha- v. “to reach at, reach for; to reach, extend (intr.)”
- rala- v. “to sing, carol, trill”
- ram n. “wing, pinion”
- Rân n. “Moon”
- ranc n. “burst, breach”
- ranoth n. “month”
- rantha n. “arch, bridge”
- ras- v. “to scorch, toast”
- rasc n. “toast(ed bread)”
- rath n. “the full arm, the extent of one’s arm, one’s reach; a measure = 2 feet”
- rau n. “lion”
- raug adj. “swift, rushing”
- raust n. “hunt, chase”
- rausta- v. “to hunt, chase, pursue (only in actual sense of following game)”
- rautha- v. “hunt, chase, pursue”
- redhin adj. “related”
- redhos n. “land”
- †redhweg n. “cousin [m.]”
- †redhwin n. “cousin [f.]”
- ren(d) n. “cousin (m.), relative”
- renni n. “family”
- ress n. “cousin (f.), relative”
- rest¹ n. “aid, support, help”
- †rest² n. “kinship”
- resta- v. “to support, to aid”
- restu adj. “out of land, abroad, away from home”
- reth- v. “to save, rescue, preserve”
- #-ri suf. “abstract noun”
- rî n. “coolness, cool; a sudden breeze or cold breath”
- rib n. “shore; stripe, line; border, fringe”
- ribin adj. “striped, edged”
- ribrog n. “zebra” see raibrog
- rictha- v. “to contort, twist, confuse, disarrange, upset”
- rig n. “a snarl, a sneer”
- rig- v. “to twist, contort”
- #-(r)il suf. “feminine agent”
- -rim suf. “*many” see -lim
- rim¹ n. “stripe, line; border, fringe”
- rim² n. and adj. “peace, quietness, calm; quiet, calm, peaceful”
- rimin¹ adj. “striped, edged”
- rimin² adj. “quiet, calm, peaceful”
- rimp n. “shred, slice, sliver”
- #-(r)in suf. “adjective suffix”
- rin- v. “to revolve, return, come back; to do again”
- rinc adj. and n. “circular; disc, rondure”
- ring adj. “cool, cold”
- rinta- v. “*to return”
- #-r(i)ol suf. “adjective suffix”
- rô- v. “to remain, stay, stand; to endure”
- rô¹ adj. “enduring, long suffering; quiet, gentle, docile”
- rô² n. “[unglossed]”
- rod n. “tube, stem”
- rodos n. “cavern”
- rodrin adj. “cylindrical”
- rôg adj. “doughty, strong”
- rogli n. “little pipe (especially musical)”
- rôl n. “a song”
- rôma n. “shoulder”
- #-(r)on suf. “agental suffix”
- rôn¹ n. “embrace, clasp”
- rôn² n. “liver”
- ront adj. “high, steep”
- rôs¹ n. “embrace” see rôn¹
- rôs² n. “endurance, meekness, patience, gentleness”
- ross n. “pipe”
- rost n. “slope, hill side, ascent”
- rosta n. “ascent, uprising, rising”
- †roth n. “cave, grot”
- rôtha- n. “embrace”
- rothrin adj. “hollow”
- rû¹ n. “dwelling, house”
- †rû² n. “mystery” see rûm
- rûdin adj. “hollow, cavernous”
- ruf- v. “to tear”
- rui n. “whisper”
- ruim adj. “secret, mysterious”
- ruin adj. “inhabited, tilled”
- ruitha- v. “to whisper, rustle”
- rum n. “noise”
- rûm n. “secret, mystery”
- rumla- v. “to make a noise”
- rûs n. “endurance, long suffering, patience”
- rusg n. “oatcake”
- rust n. “inhabitation; cultivation, tillage”
- rûtha- v. “to dwell, remain”
- ruthla adj. “oaten”
- ruthli n. “oats”
- sâ n. “fire”
- sabli n. “spade, shovel”
- sachwen n. “summer, midsummer” see saiwen
- sactha- v. “to fight”
- sad- v. “to reck, care, value, esteem, show respect for, consider”
- sâd n. “riches, wealth”
- safwen n. “summer” see saiwen
- sagruin adj. “ferocious; full of hate towards”
- sagruith n. “hatred; revenge”
- saib n. “boot”
- saichwed adj. “fiery, fierce” see sairin
- saictha- v. “to have hunger” see saitha-
- saidhon n. “noon”
- saig adj. “hungry”
- saigri n. “hunger (great), famine”
- sair adj. “hot”
- sairin adj. “fiery, fierce”
- saith n. “hunger”
- saitha- v. “to have hunger”
- saiwen n. “summer, midsummer”
- salc n. “green cut grass, ensilage”
- salca- v. “to scythe or mow”
- salf n. “bowl, basin”
- salfinc n. “spoon”
- salta n. “a game”
- saltha- v. “play”
- salum n. “*harp”
- sam adj. “arranged, settled, done” see samin
- sam- v. “to arrange, put together, adjust, settle, reconcile”
- samin adj. “arranged, settled, done”
- samri n. “arrangement”
- samtha- v. “to settle a matter legally”
- sana- v. “can; to know how to; to have knowledge, craft or skill”
- sanc n. “jag, tooth”
- santha- v. “to show, declare, point out, make known or clear”
- santhi n. “knowledge, experience (in) or skill (in)”
- saptha- v. “to dig, bite into”
- sara- v. “ait”
- sard n. “table”
- sarn n. “a stone”
- sarofarn n. “the seashore”
- saros n. “surf, sea”
- saroth n. “sea” see saros
- sarothod n. “voyager, seafarer, (lit.) foreigner from overseas”
- sarothwad n. “voyager, seafarer, (lit.) foreigner from overseas” see sarothod
- sath num. card. “ten”
- saul n. “great wind”
- saur n. “hound, wild dog”
- sauth n. “a hole, tunnel”
- sectha n. and adj. “centre”
- sectha- v. “to aim at”
- secthadron adj. “midmost” see segron
- seg n. “point, middle point”
- segrin adj. “middle”
- segron adj. “midmost”
- sempios n. “holly, (lit.) *red-berry”
- sen adj. “brown-red, russet”
- sentha adj. “russet”
- seth adj. “dry”
- sethra- v. “dry up”
- sî¹ n. “bead, small gem or pearl”
- sî² adv. “here”
- sibra- v. “to weep, whimper”
- siel n. “granddaughter”
- sigweth n. “lamentation, weeping”
- sigwithiel n. “lamentation; weeping willow”
- Sil n. “Rose of Silpion, Moon”
- silc n. “flint”
- Silma n. “*Moon”
- silwin n. “swan”
- sin adv. “*here” see sî²
- si(n)- pref. “granddaughter of”
- sinc n. “metal”
- sincli n. “crystal”
- sind n. “[unglossed]”
- sing n. “salt”
- singrin adj. “salt”
- sinnai n. “today”
- sint n. “spark”
- sinta- v. “to sparkle”
- sinthi pron. “[unglossed]”
- sion n. “grandson”
- siptha- v. “to whistle”
- sîr n. “river”
- siriol adj. “flowing, fluent, liquid, mellifluous”
- sirp n. “straw”
- sith adv. “hither”
- sitha¹ n. “fly”
- sitha² adj. “this”
- sithagong n. “dragonfly”
- sithaling n. “fly snake, dragonfly”
- sô- v. “to wash clean, bathe”
- soctha- v. “to give to drink, quench”
- socthor n. “a drinking-horn”
- sog- v. “to drink”
- sogli n. “a drinking-horn”
- sogridâr n. “a drinking-horn”
- sôm n. “law, custom, rule”
- sôn¹ adj. “pure, clean”
- sôn² n. “craft, skill”
- sôr n. “wave, billow”
- soros n. “ash-tree”
- soth n. “bath”
- sovri n. “cleansing”
- sovriel n. “purification (religious)”
- #-st suf. “noun suffix”
- #-sta suf. “verb suffix” see #-tha¹
- sû n. “noise of wind”
- sui n. “daughter” see suil
- suib adj. “dry”
- suil n. “daughter”
- suith n. “drink, draught”
- suitha- v. “to dry, wipe”
- suithlas n. “tea”
- suithli n. “towel”
- sulus n. “air-spirit”
- sûr adj. “long, trailing”
- susc adj. “hushed, quiet; abashed”
- suss¹ interj. “hush”
- suss² n. “hush, sudden quiet”
- sûtha- v. “to blow (of wind)”
- suthra- v. “to hush, to make or go quiet”
- tab- v. “to cut to shape, fashion”
- tadhos n. “hawthorn”
- tag- v. “to fix, make firm, construct”
- taglos n. “smith” see tagros
- †tagor n. “smith”
- tagros n. “smith”
- tair n. “look-out, watch, guard; gaze, regard”
- taith n. “a letter, mark, sign”
- taitha- v. “to teach”
- taithion adj. “educated”
- tâl (tald-) n. “foot”
- talc adj. “upright”
- taleg n. “(foot)path”
- talgrin(d) n. “ankle”
- taloth n. “(foot)path” see taleg
- talp¹ n. “prop, support”
- talp² n. “glass”
- talpa- v. “to prop up, buttress up”
- talpon n. “a slender pillar”
- taltha n. “foot (of things), base, pedestal, pediment”
- tam n. “copper”
- tambin adj. “of copper”
- tambos n. “cauldron”
- tambrin adj. “like copper”
- tan n. “firewood”
- tanc adj. “firm, steady, settled”
- tand n. “enclosure, garden”
- tang n. “flame, flash”
- tanga- v. “to set light to, kindle” see tantha-
- tangar n. “hearthgrate, fireplace”
- tangor n. “hearthgrate, fireplace” see tangar
- tant n. “a number”
- tanta n. “a dance”
- tantha- v. “to set light to, kindle”
- târ n. “horn”
- tarc n. “root (especially edible roots)”
- tarf adj. “dry, stale” see tarp
- tarn n. “gate”
- tarnon n. “porter”
- tarog n. “ox”
- tarp adj. “dry, stale”
- taru¹ n. “cross; crossing”
- taru² adj. “horned”
- tast¹ n. “border, fringe”
- tast² n. “total, amount”
- tath- v. “to count”
- tath n. “hedge, fence”
- tathn n. “number”
- tathna- v. “to number, count, reckon”
- tathrin n. “willow”
- taudha n. “phosphorous”
- tauga adj. “suitable, fitting, convenient”
- taul n. “pillar”
- taur¹ n. “dense wood or forest”
- †taur² n. “ability, power”
- taura adj. “powerful”
- taus adj. “shaggy”
- tavor n. “wood fay”
- tavros n. “forest, wooded land”
- tê n. “mark, line; track; path”
- teb n. “point, nib, neb, nose”
- tectha- v. “to write”
- tefla- v. “to scorn”
- teflarol adj. “abject, mean” see tefra
- tefra adj. “abject, mean”
- teg n. “point, dot, spot”
- teglath n. “noted year, special year, feast year”
- teglos n. “awning”
- teilian n. “mockery”
- teilin n. “stunt or jest”
- teld n. “roof”
- telfod n. “final end, the very last”
- telm n. “roof; sky”
- teloth n. “roofing, canopy, shelter”
- telt n. “lid”
- teltha- v. “cover in”
- telthion adj. “roofed in, sheltered, protected”
- telthon n. “roof” see teld
- telu- v. “to close, end, finish”
- telu n. “end”
- telum n. “roof; sky” see telm
- telwed adj. “roofed in, sheltered, protected” see telthion
- tenc n. “pen, nib”
- tent n. “toe”
- tentha- v. “feel with the feet, walk on tiptoe”
- teraith n. “waste, ruin, destruction”
- terch n. “worm” see tereg
- tercha- v. “to devour, destroy” see tertha-
- tereg n. “worm”
- tertha- v. “to devour, destroy”
- tess(il) n. “little flower; †maiden”
- teth n. “bud”
- tethla- v. “to bud”
- tethlas n. “petal, *(lit.) bud-leaf”
- -th suf. “plural suffix”
- #-tha¹ suf. “verb suffix”
- #-tha² suf. “noun or adjective suffix”
- thaf n. “hay”
- thafwen n. “hay, harvest”
- thaig n. “choice”
- thaigra adj. “choice, select, elegant”
- thail n. “[unglossed]”
- thairin adj. “magic”
- thairiniol adj. “magical”
- thairinwed adj. “magical” see thairiniol
- tham n. “chamber, room”
- thambros n. “hall”
- thanc n. “loathing, hatred”
- thancol adj. “loathsome”
- thang n. “a crowd, crush, herd”
- thar- v. “to saw (up)”
- tharm n. “saw”
- thas pron. “thy”
- thas- v. “to shave”
- thasc adj. “shaven”
- thasgim n. “*razor, (lit.) shave-blade”
- thast n. “shaving”
- thastril n. “razor”
- thathri n. “shavings, sawdust”
- thê- v. “to see”
- thed n. “eye; bud”
- thegin adj. “leading, chief”
- thegla n. “first lights of dawn”
- thegor n. “chief”
- thegra adj. “first, foremost”
- thel n. “[unglossed]”
- thelg n. “[unglossed]”
- ther- v. “to tie”
- theres n. “tie, ribbon”
- thest n. “sight (sense of); a sight, vision”
- #-thi¹ suf. “noun suffix”
- -thi² suf. “*diminutive suffix” see -chi
- thibin n. “flute”
- thibindon n. “flute-playing”
- thibinweg n. “piper”
- thig- v. “to pick out, select, choose”
- thil n. “[unglossed]”
- Thilim n. “*Moon” see Silma
- thim n. “milk (after separation)”
- thimli n. “whistle, piccolo”
- thimp n. “the stop on a flute”
- thimpa- v. “to play a flute or whistle”
- thimpion n. “a piper”
- thin- v. “to skim”
- thinc n. “a pick, a choice; a bunch, posy”
- thinta- v. “to skim” see thin-
- thion n. “[unglossed]”
- thisc adj. “dry, waterless”
- thisin adj. “parched, withered”
- thista- v. “to dry up (tr.)”
- thith n. “dust”
- thithrin adj. “dusty”
- thlib- v. “to sup, lap up, suck”
- -thlib suf. “-ly or -like”
- thlibri n. “soup”
- thlid- v. “to sort out, sift, sieve, discriminate”
- thlid n. “sieve”
- thlidhra adj. “‘willowy’, gracile”
- -thlim suf. “race, folk”
- thlim n. “race, kind, species, sort”
- thlind adj. “fine, slender”
- thloss n. “breaker”
- thloth n. “breakers, waves, surf”
- *-thol suf. “adjective suffix”
- thol- v. “to roll”
- tholos¹ n. “axle of a wheel”
- tholos² n. “sea-marge”
- thorn n. “eagle”
- thoth n. “spell, evil enchantment of magic”
- thothri n. “black magic”
- thothweg n. “wizard”
- thrad n. “a plank, board, shelf”
- thram n. “saw” see tharm
- thred n. “knot”
- thribin adj. “lean”
- thrim ? “[unglossed]”
- thrimp n. “stalk”
- thripthon n. “stem”
- thrond n. “(eyrie), pinnacle”
- throsta- v. “to beat, splash”
- throth n. “beat (of oars, wings, etc.)”
- throthriol n. “wizardous”
- thû- v. “[unglossed]”
- thuctha- v. “to adhere to, cleave”
- thug n. “[unglossed]”
- thugli n. “resin”
- thuif n. “resinous juice; any adhesive substance” see thuith
- thuith n. “resinous juice; any adhesive substance”
- -thwi suf. see fwi-
- tî adj. and n. “straight; line”
- tibli n. “drizzle, sleet”
- tîf n. “resentment, ill feeling, bitterness”
- tif- v. “to whistle”
- tifin n. “small flute”
- tigla- v. “to prick”
- tiglas n. “remorse” see tiglath
- tiglath n. “remorse”
- tîl n. “cicatrice, scab, healing of a wound”
- tilithli n. “little elf”
- tilithril n. “f. elf”
- tilithrin adj. “elfin”
- tilithron n. “m. elf”
- tim n. “spark, gleam, (star)”
- timp n. “hoot, note of a flute”
- timpa- v. “to ring, jingle, tinkle”
- timpi n. “little bell”
- timpintha- v. “to ring, jingle, tinkle” see timpa-
- tinc n. “a flicker, a gleam”
- tinta- v. “to dance”
- tintiltha- v. “to twinkle”
- tinwin n. “a small star”
- tinwithli n. “group of stars, star-cluster, constellation”
- tion n. “a straight line”
- tir- v. “to look (out) for, watch for, await, expect”
- tîr¹ adj. and n. “†straight, upright, honest (aj.); esteem, regard, honour”
- tîr² n. “king” see tûr
- tirin n. “watch-tower, turret, tower”
- †tirion n. “watch-tower, turret, tower” see tirin
- tisc adj. “ticklish”
- tisca- v. “to tickle”
- tô n. “wool”
- tôb(a) n. “shape, cut, fashion”
- tôd n. “hat”
- tôdhi n. “paddock”
- tôg n. “storey, floor (of a house)”
- togli n. “cap”
- tôl n. “mantle”
- tol n. “isle (with high steep coast)”
- tôn n. “fire (on a hearth)”
- torc n. “a sear, mark of a burn”
- torn adj. “sunburnt, swart, dark-brown”
- torod adj. “fierce, violent”
- tortha- v. “to scorch”
- tram n. “bridge”
- tranc adj. “criss-cross, crossed; cross, at cross purpose, perverse”
- trantha- v. “to cross (tr. & intr.); to mark with a cross”
- trath n. “passage, ford”
- tricthon n. “(fibrous fine) root”
- †trôn n. “a cross; a crossing”
- trug adj. “easy to handle; convenient, tractable, docile”
- trum ? “[unglossed]”
- †-tt suf. “dual”
- tû- v. “to get, receive, take; to become”
- tub- v. “to cover”
- tubla- v. “to hide (intr.)”
- tubrin adj. “hidden”
- tuf n. “down, fluff”
- tufrin adj. “fluffy”
- tug- v. “to hit, reach mark; to light on, chance on, find; to arrive; to chance, occur; to suit, fit, be convenient, ‘do’”
- tuig n. “shoot, sapling, sprout”
- tuil n. “spring”
- tuilir n. “spring(time)”
- tuim n. “steam”
- tuitha- v. “to sprout, spring, gush”
- tul- v. “to bring; to come to; †to support”
- tulga- v. “to make firm, confirm, settle, steady; to comfort”
- tulog adj. “steady, firm” see tulug
- tultha- v. “to lift, carry”
- tulug adj. “steady, firm”
- tûm n. “valley”
- tum n. “hollow”
- tumbol adj. “valley-like, hollow, excavated”
- tumla- v. “to excavate, hollow out”
- tumli n. “dale”
- tump n. “shed”
- tûn n. “[unglossed]”
- tunc n. “chance; occurrence; arrival; hit at shooting; luck”
- tund n. “log for the fire”
- tung n. “a thought, an idea”
- tungol adj. “wise, knowing”
- tûr n. “king”
- tur- v. “can, to have power to”
- turinthi n. “princess”
- turinthir n. “*queen” see turwin
- turioth n. “kingship”
- turm n. “authority, rule; strength”
- turwin n. “queen”
- tûs- v. “to tease wool, comb out”
- tusc adj. “inflammable; touchy, irritable; explosive”
- tusta- v. “to inflame, kindle, set light to, burn (tr.)”
- tustarol adj. “inflammable”
- tuth n. “tinder”
- tuthli n. “match”
- tuthlos n. “a teazle”
- tuvrin adj. “acceptable”
- tuvriol adj. “acceptable” see tuvrin
- u- pref. “negative prefix”
- û- v. “not to be, not to do”
- u adv. “no, not, nor”
- ub¹ adj. “wet, moist, damp”
- ub² adj. “no, none”
- ubra- v. “to rain”
- ubri n. “rainfall, rain”
- uch n. “rain”
- uchir n. “recklessness; carelessness; security”
- uchirin adj. “secure”
- uchirthol adj. “reckless”
- udathnarol adj. “countless, innumerable”
- udathriol adj. “countless”
- udrug adj. “intractable, fierce, untamed”
- uf¹ prep. “out of, forth, from”
- uf² n. “fine wool, down”
- ufedhron n. “lawless man”
- ufedhwed adj. “lawless”
- ufestog adj. “breathless”
- uf(f)edhin adj. and n. “outlaw, outcast; one who changes his clan and goes to a new kinship”
- ufra adj. “outer”
- ug- v. “negative verb”
- ûg n. “mud”
- ûgrin adj. “muddy”
- ugwedriol adj. “ineffable, unspeakable, awful”
- -ui suf. “dual” see -wi¹
- uil n. “hen”
- uimoth n. “whale, (lit.) sheep of the waves”
- uin n. “whale, †wave”
- *-uin suf. “*noun suffix”
- uir- v. “not to wish, not mean to, mean not to”
- uirol adj. “unwilling, reluctant”
- uista- v. “not to notice”
- uith adj. “both”
- uitha- v. “to lay eggs, nest”
- uivrin adj. “barren”
- ul- pref. “miss-, wrongly, ill, badly”
- ûl n. “a ghost”
- ulc adj. “bad, evil, wicked”
- ulcarm n. “sin”
- ulch adj. “bad” see ulc
- ulcoth n. “wickedness”
- ulcrum n. “sin” see ulcarm
- ulin adj. and n. “liquid”
- ulm n. “jar, flagon”
- ulna- v. “to ooze”
- ultha- v. “to pour out (tr.)”
- ulthanc n. “[unglossed]”
- uluch n. “she-dragon”
- uluchnir n. “she-dragon” see uluch
- ulug¹ n. “dragon”
- ulug² n. “wolf” see urc
- ulugwin n. “she-dragon” see uluch
- ulvon n. “*monster, giant”
- ûm n. “voice”
- -(u)m suf. “?indefinite suffix”
- um¹ pron. “we”
- um² adj. “lowlying”
- umbart n. “fate”
- umbath n. “nightfall” see umboth
- umbel n. “a dell”
- umboth n. “nightfall”
- umeg ? “[unglossed]”
- ûmi adj. “large”
- umin pron. “we” see um¹
- umir n. “nobody, no one (fem.)”
- umli n. “a dell” see umbel
- umrod n. “fate” see umbart
- ûna n. “hope”
- ûna- v. “to hope”
- unath n. “nothing” see unt
- unathriol adj. “unreal; impossible”
- unaudrathrol adj. “unabashed, shameless”
- unc¹ pron. “ourselves”
- unc² n. “ear, handle (of a jar)”
- ungathos n. “eighteen” see unthos
- ungra adj. “eighth”
- ungwi n. “spider”
- unt n. “nothing”
- untha adj. and adv. “no, none”
- unthos n. “eighteen”
- unweg n. “nobody, no one”
- uptha- v. “to shout”
- ûr n. “smith”
- urc n. “wolf”
- urf n. “apple (tree)”
- urin adj. “hot, very hot”
- urm n. “brazier, grate”
- urna- v. “to blaze, burn (intr.)”
- urtha- v. “to work, wreak, fashion, make, devise”
- urthu n. “*death” see gurth(u)
- us- v. “to leave, depart”
- usb n. “fog, mist” see usc
- usc n. “fog, mist”
- usfeg- v. “to release”
- usg n. “fog, mist” see usc
- ust n. “cloudy air”
- usta- v. “to leave, depart” see us-
- ûtha- v. “to emit; to issue”
- uthairiol adj. “unintentional, unintended; reluctant”
- ûthi n. “outside”
- uthra- v. “to get away, escape”
- uthwen n. “escape, way out, exit”
- uvin n. “eight”
- -vran suf. “dwelling”
- -vron suf. “dwelling” see -vran
- #-wed suf. “adjective suffix”
- -weg suf. “masculine suffix”
- -wein suf. “*female suffix” see -win
- #-wen¹ suf. “noun suffix”
- -wen² suf. “*augmentative”
- #-weth suf. “noun suffix”
- -wi¹ suf. “dual”
- #-wi² suf. “noun suffix”
- #-wig suf. “*female suffix” see -win
- -win suf. “*female suffix”
- ŷr n. “smith” see ûr
- yrin adj. “made (by craft of hand)” see aurin