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Quenya Compass Directions

Here’s a list of the four compass-points in Quenya. I included their Allative and Ablative cases, for quick reference. English Quenya To the ___ From the ___ In the ___ East Rómen Rómenna Rómello Rómesse North Formen Formenna Formello Formesse South Hyarmen Hyarmenna Hyarmello Hyarmesse West Númen Númenna Númello Númesse

Sindarin Compass Directions

Here’s a list of the four compass-points in Sindarin. I included them in some prepositional phrases, for quick reference. English Sindarin To the ___ From the ___ In the ___ East Amrûn n’Amrûn od Amrûn vi Amrûn North Forod na Forod o Forod vi Forod South Harad na Charad o

Rachel in Elvish

Rachel, your name is really cool! It means “ewe” in Hebrew. Sindarin Sindarin doesn’t have a word for “sheep.” We have two options here: Use a less precise word for an animal: Lavan. Coin a new word, based on the Quenya word and the ancient root it was based on,

Timothy in Elvish

Timothy, your name is really cool! It’s an Ancient Greek name that means “Honour God.” The “Honour” part is a verb, so we’ll make that into an agental noun (honourer/one who honours) to make it fit with Elven name-structures. The Theos part here is referring to the Christian god, so

Lynn in Elvish

Lynn, your name is really cool! It has a ton of different sources. It could be another version of Linda. It could be derived from surnames that were based in place names, like Lyn (from Llyn – lake), Lynn (from Linn – pool under a waterfall), and Lynn (from Lean

Joshua In Elvish

Joshua, your name is really cool! It means “YHWH will save.” It has a fascinating history because it entered into the European languages twice: once through Ancient Greek, and again when translators of the Bible started looking at older, closer to the original sources and retranslating everything. Basically, Joshua and

Madeline in Elvish

Madeline, your name is really cool! It’s from the Ancient Greek word meaning “of/from Magdala.” It was used as an epithet for one of the many Biblical characters named Mary, and started to become used as a name on its own after the translation into Latin. Magdala itself is the

Andrew in Elvish

Andrew, your name is really cool! It’s an Ancient Greek name meaning “man (as in the gendered term).” This name has been imported to many languages, and become a name for women as well, which makes the translation a little difficult. For those, I’ll shift the translation to “manly” instead.