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Adûnaic Family-Words

This is a list of words for various familial relationships. I’ve organized them by number. A quick set of definitions of the grammatical terms: Singular One [noun] Plural More than two [noun]s Dual Two [noun]s English Singular Plural Dual parent nuphâr nuphârî nuphrât mother ammê ammênî ammêt father attô attôi

Adûnaic Gender-Words

Unfortunately, Tolkien’s world doesn’t have a notion of gender beyond male/female. Here’s a list of words that they do have. I’ve organized them by number. A quick set of definitions of the grammatical terms: Singular One [noun] Plural More than two [noun]s Dual Two [noun]s English Singular Plural Dual woman

Adûnaic Pronouns

We know only a handful of Adûnaic pronouns. The ones that aren’t attested in the source material are colored red. I’ve organized them according to person and number. Singular Plural 1st ni nê 2nd ki li 3rd neuter ha/a ya 3rd female hi/i yi 3rd male hu/u yu

Adûnaic Sentient Creatures, Tribes, and Nationalities

Here’s a list of words for sentient things capable of speech. I’ve organized them by number. *Asterisks mark Neo-Adûnaic words. A quick set of definitions of the grammatical terms: Singular One [noun] Plural More than two [noun]s Dual Two [noun]s English Singular Plural Dual Elf Nimir Nimîr Nimrât Elf-woman Nimrî

Neo-Quenya

If you found an asterisk and it led you here, then the word following it is reconstructed. Reconstructed words aren’t found in Tolkien’s work, but a made by guessing how Tolkien would have made the word. Luckily for us, Tolkien left a lot of material behind to reconstruct from. Of

Neo-Sindarin

If you found an asterisk in the phrasebooks, then the word following it is reconstructed. Reconstructed words aren’t found in Tolkien’s work, but a made by guessing how Tolkien would have made the word. Luckily for us, Tolkien left a lot of material behind to reconstruct from. Of course, this

Quenya Case Suffixes

Quenya noun-cases are well-documented. The ones that aren’t attested in the source material are colored red. I’ve organized them according to case and number. This is only a quick reference chart for translators already familiar with Quenya. For everyone else, this chart won’t be very useful. Singular Plural Dual Nominative

Quenya Family-Words

This is a list of words for various familial relationships. I’ve organized them by the relationship and by number. Archaic versions of the words are in (parentheses). A quick set of definitions of the grammatical terms: Singular One [noun] Plural More than two [noun]s Dual Two [noun]s Partitive Some [noun]s

Quenya Gender-Words

Unfortunately, Tolkien’s elves don’t have a notion of gender beyond male/female. Here’s a list of words that they do have. I’ve organized them by number. Archaic versions of the words are in (parentheses). A quick set of definitions of the grammatical terms: Singular One [noun] Plural More than two [noun]s

Quenya Pronouns

Quenya Pronouns are well-documented. Tolkien described them many times. The ones that aren’t attested in the source material are colored red. I’ve organized them according to case, person, and number. It should be noted that Tolkien changed his mind on what the pronouns would be a few times over the