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móro noun “ink” (PE16:133) morqua



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móro noun “ink” (PE16:133)

morqua adj. "black" (LT1:261; rather morna in LotR-style Quenya)

moru- vb. "to hide" (LT1:261)

Moryo see Morifinwë under mori-

móta- noun "labour, toil" (MŌ)

motto noun "blot" (MBOTH)

muilë noun "secrecy" (MUY)

muina adj. "hidden, secret" (MUY)

[múlanoldorin] noun "the language of the Noldor enslaved by Morgoth" (MŌ) (Changed by Tolkien to mólanoldorin.)



mul- vb. “grind”, pa.t. múle (QL:63)

mulë noun ”meal, grist” (PE17:115, 181), replacing polë, q.v.

mulma noun “fine flour” (QL:63). Compare mulë from a post-LotR source.

mundo (1) noun "bull" (Letters:422)

mundo (2) noun "snout, nose, cape" (MBUD)

munta pron. "nothing" (PE14:81)

murmë noun "slumber" (LT1:261)

murmëa adj. "slumbrous" (LT1:261)

muru- vb. "to slumber" (LT1:261)

mussë adj. "soft" (VT:39:17), also used as a noun (perhaps primarily in the pl. form mussi) with the same meaning as mussë tengwi, see below. (VT39:17)

#mussë tengwë noun-phrase only attested in the pl.: mussë tengwi ("ñ") "soft elements", a term for vowels, semi-vowels (y, w) and continuants (l, r, m, n). (In the pl. we would rather expect *mussi tengwi with the pl. form of the adjective.) (VT39:17)


-n (1) dative ending, originating as a reduced form of - “to”, related to the allative ending -nna (VT49:14). Attested in nin, men, ten, enyalien, Erun, airefëan, tárin, yondon (q.v.) and also added to the English name Elaine (Elainen) in a book dedication to Elaine Griffiths (VT49:40). The longer dative ending -na is also attested in connection with some pronouns, such as sena, téna, véna (q.v.), also in the noun mariéna from márië “goodness” (PE17:59). Pl. -in (as in hínin, see hína), partitive pl. -lin, dual -nt (Plotz). The preposition ana (#1) is said to be used “when purely dative formula is required” (PE17:147), perhaps meaning that it can replace the dative ending, e.g. *ana Eru instead of Erun for “to God”. – In some of Tolkien’s earlier material, the ending -n (or -en) expressed genitive rather than dative, but he later decided that the genitive ending was to be -o (cf. such a revision as Yénië Valinóren becoming Yénië Valinórëo, MR:200).

-n (2), also -nyë, pronominal ending, 1st person sg. "I" (VT49:51), as in utúlien "I am come" (EO), cainen “I lay” (VT48:12-13), carin or carinyë “I do” (VT49:16), veryanen *”I married” (VT49:45). See also VT49:48. Long form -nye- with object ending -s “it” following in utúvienyes (see tuv-). A possible attestation of -n in object position (“me”) is provided by the untranslated verbal form tankassen (PE17:76), where -n may be preceded by -sse- as a longer form of the 3rd person sg. ending -s (see -s #1).

-n (3) a plural sign used in some of the case endings (WJ:407): Pl. genitive -on, pl. ablative -llon (but also -llor), pl. locative -ssen.



n-alalmino ??? (twice in Narqelion; perhaps ne + alalmino)

(1) vb. "is" (am). (Nam, RGEO:67). This is the copula used to join adjectives, nouns or pronouns “in statements (or wishes) asserting (or desiring) a thing to have certain quality, or to be the same as another” (VT49:28). Also in impersonal constructions: ringa ná “it is cold” (VT49:23). The copula may however be omitted “where the meaning is clear” without it (VT49:9). is also used as an interjection “yes” or “it is so” (VT49:28). Short na in airë [] na, "[] is holy" (VT43:14; some subject can evidently be inserted in the place of [].) Short na also functions as imperative: alcar mi tarmenel na Erun "glory in high heaven be to God" (VT44:32/34), also na airë "be holy" (VT43:14); also cf. nai “be it that” (see nai #1). The imperative participle á may be prefixed (á na, PE17:58). However, VT49:28 cites as the imperative form. Pl. nar or nár “are" (PE15:36, VT49:27, 9, 30); dual nát (VT49:30). With pronominal endings: nányë/nanyë “I am”, nalyë or natyë “you (sg.) are” (polite and familiar, respectively), nás “it is”, násë “(s)he is”, nalmë “we are” (VT49:27, 30). Some forms listed in VT49:27 are perhaps to be taken as representing the aorist: nain, naityë, nailyë (1st person sg, and 2nd person familiar/polite, respectively); does a following na represent the aorist with no pronominal ending? However, the forms nanyë, nalyë, , nassë, nalme, nar (changed from nár) are elsewhere said to be “aorist”, without the extra vowel i (e.g. nalyë rather than nailyë); also notice that *“(s)he is” is here nassë rather than násë (VT49:30). Pa.t. nánë or “was”, pl. náner/nér and dual nét “were” (VT49:6, 9, 10, 27, 28, 30, 36). According to VT49:31, “was” cannot receive pronominal endings (though nésë “he was” is attested elsewhere, VT49:28-29), and such endings are rather added to the form ane-, e.g. anen “I was”, anel “you were”, anes “(s)he/it was” (VT49:28-29). Future tense nauva "will be" (VT42:34, VT49:19, 27; another version however gives the future tense as uva, VT49:30). Nauva with a pronominal ending occurs in tanomë nauvan “I will be there” (VT49:19), this example indicating that forms of the verb may also be used to indicate position. Perfect anaië “has been” (VT49:27, first written as anáyë). Infinitive (or gerund) návë “being”, PE17:68. See also nai #1.


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