quëa noun “vegetable”, apparently with variant ceula (latter word is not clearly defined). (PE17:159).
quëan cardinal "ten", also quain (VT48:6, 12, 20). Quain or quëan replaced the form cainen in Tolkien’s conception.
#quel- ("q") vb. "to fail" (wane, wither, fade; compare the nouns quelië “waning”, quellë “fading”), only attested in the future tense (queluva in FS).
quelet ("q") (quelets-, as in pl. queletsi) noun "corpse" (KWEL; Markirya also has loico)
quelië noun "waning" in Narquelië, q.v.
quellë noun "fading", in the calendar of Imladris a precisely defined period of 54 days, but also used without any exact definition, for the latter part of autumn and the beginning of winter (Appendix D)
quén (quen-, as in pl. queni; as final element in compounds -quen) noun "one, (some)body, person, individual, man or woman", pl. queni = "persons", "(some) people", "they" with the most general meaning (as in "they [= people in general] say that..."). The element is combined with noun and adjective stems in old compounds to denote habitual occupations or functions, or to describe those having some notable (permanent) quality; examples include roquen, ciryaquen, arquen, q.v. Also in aiquen “whoever”, ilquen “everybody” (WJ:361 cf. 360, 372).
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