walda adj. “excited, wild” (PE17:154)
walmë noun “excitement, emotion” (PE17:154, 189)
walta- vb. “to excite, rouse, stir up” (PE17:154)
walwistë noun “change of mind” (PE17:189)
walya- vb. “be excited (moved)” (PE17:154)
wán > ván noun "goose" (WA-N).
wanwa (1) adj. older form of vanwa “lost, gone” etc. (see vanwa) (PE17:143)
wanwa (2) noun "great gale" (LT1:266). This word would clash with vanwa “gone, lost” after the change of initial w > v, and since the latter is also said to come from older wanwa (PE17:143), this “Qenya” term for “great gale” is probably conceptually obsolete.
wanwavoitë noun "windy" (LT1:266). Compare wanwa above.
waþar older form of vasar, q.v. (VT42:9)
wáya- “blow” (PE17:34, cf. wanwa), perhaps altered to váva (q.v.; the wording of the source is unclear)
we, wé, see ve #2
-wë a suffix occurring in many personal names, generally but not exclusively masculine (Elenwë is the sole certain example of a fem. name with this ending); it is derived from a stem simply meaning "person" (PM:340, WJ:399). In Etym, -wë is simply defined as an element that is frequent in masculine names, and it is there derived from a stem (WEG) having to do with "(manly) vigour".
'wembë noun “worm” (QL:103). Read *vembë if the word is to be adopted to Third Age Quenya according to Tolkien's later ideas.
wén noun "greenness, youth, freshness" (GWEN), blended with wendë "maid"
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