venessë noun "virginity" (WEN/WENED)
venië noun? "shape, cut" (LT1:254)
venno noun "husband" (cited as **verno in the Etymologies as printed in LR, entry BES, but according to VT45:7, this is a misreading of Tolkien's manuscript). In a later source, the word for “husband” is given as veru, q.v.
venta noun "chin" (QL:101)
venwë noun? "shape, cut" (LT1:254)
†vëo noun "man" (WEG; etymologically connected to vëa "manly, vigorous"; the more neutral word for "man" is nér. According to VT46:21, Tolkien indicated that vëo is an archaic or poetic word.) Tolkien at a later point defined the word as “living creature” (PE17:189). Cf. variant wëo, q.v.
véra (< Old Quenya wéra) noun "personal, private, own" (PM:340)
verca ("k") adj. "wild" (BERÉK)
vérë (1) noun "bond, troth, compact, oath" (WED)
Vérë (2) fem. name, tentative replacement form for the name Vairë, apparently never introduced in any narratives (PE17:33)
veri noun “wife” (VT49:45)
verië noun "boldness" (BER)
**verno noun "husband", misreading for venno, q.v. (BES)
verta- vb. “to give in marriage” (give a person in marriage to another); also “to take as husband or wife (to oneself)” (VT49:45)
veru (1) noun “husband” (VT49:45). An earlier source gives the word for “husband” as venno.
veru (2) dual noun "husband and wife, married pair" (BES). Obsoleted by #1 above? (Notice that the word veru “married pair” comes from the same source that has venno rather than veru as the word for “husband”.)
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