tyal- vb. "play" (1st pers. aorist tyalin "I play") (TYAL)
tyalangan noun "harp-player" (TYAL)
tyalië noun "sport, play, game" (TYAL, LT1:260)
tyar- vb. "cause" (KYAR)
tyaro noun "doer, actor, agent" (KAR)
tyasta- vb. "put to the test", pa.t. tyasantë (QL:49)
tyav- vb. "taste" (1st pers. aorist tyavin "I taste") (KYAB)
tyávë noun "taste" (pl. #tyáver attested only in the compound lámatyáver, see lámatyávë.) (MR:215, 216). It may be that the verb tyav- would also appear as tyávë in the past tense.
tye pron. “you, thou, thee”, 2nd person intimate/familar (LR:61, 70, Arct, VT49:36, 55), corresponding to formal/polite lye. According to VT49:51, tye was used as an endearment especially between lovers, and (grand)parents and children also used it to address one another (“to use the adult lye was more stern”). Tyenya “my tye”, used = “dear kinsman” (VT49:51). The pronoun tye is derived from kie, sc. an original stem ki with an added -e (VT49:50). Stressed tyé; dual tyet *“the two of you” (VT49:51 – another note reproduced on the same page however states that tye has no dual form, and VT49:52 likewise states that the 2nd person familiar “never deleloped” dual or plural forms). Compare the reflexive pronoun intyë *"yourself". Possibly related to the pronominal stem KE (2nd person sg.), if tye represents earlier *kye.
-tyë pronominal ending “you, thou” (VT49:48, 51), 2nd person familiar/intimate: carityë *”you do” (VT49:16; the corresponding formal/polite ending is -l, -lyë, cf. PE17:135 where Tolkien states that hiruvalyë “thou shalt find” from Namárië would be hiruvatyë if the polite pronoun were replaced by the familiar one). Compare the independent pronoun tye. In VT49:51, Tolkien denies that the ending -tyë has any short form (see, however, -t # 3). Cf. natyë “you are”; see ná #1. Compare tye, -tya.
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