Intensifying Prefixes in The Etymologies
Intensifying Prefixes in The Etymologies
by Thorsten Renk
General Considerations
The Etymologies (as found in The Lost Road and in the Addenda and Corrigenda to the Etymologies published in Vinyar Tengwar 45 and 46) include several examples of forms that are denoted as intensified by Tolkien, among them those that are formed by a prefix. The entry A! (VT45:5) is perhaps the best starting point for a classification of these intensified forms. We learn there of an intensive prefix, distinct in origin, though similar in function to the prefixed basic vowel . The prefix a! was usually combined with dynamic lengthening of the original initial consonant and it could be applied to fully formed words. From this, we may infer the following: There are two prefixes, similar in function (i.e. intensification). One of them is a! followed by dynamic lengthening of the first consonant, the other one is the prefixed basic (i.e. root) vowel (called in Quenya the sundma ). The prefix a! could be applied to fully formed words (it stands to reason that this is said by way of contrast with the prefixed sundma , implying that this mechanism applied only to roots, not to fully-formed words). In the following, we explore what is known about these two distinct prefixes in greater detail.
fortified consonant. We find the example der, ndere Ender" ([?virile] young bridegroom) > Ender , surname of Tulkas. Although not written in capitals, this example seems to refer to elaborations of the roots DER! adult male (V:354) and NDER! strengthened form of der!man (V:375) to *ENDER in parallel with NIS! > NDIS!, INDIS!; and ndere bridegroom seems to be a form in primitive Elvish rather than Qenya or Noldorin it doesn't fit the phonology of either language. No prefixes are listed for the base vowels o or u (or explicitly for a in fact), but we can infer their existence from roots listed in the Etymologies (see also Helge Fauskangers article Primitive Elvish). V:348 has ANR! sun derivative of NAR1 ! (V:374) and ANAK! cf. NAK bite () jaw, thus confirming the possible elaboration of a root with sundma a . The intensification NAR! > ANR! seems to follow a similar idea as THIL! > ITHIL! . NED! centre (V:356) connects well with ND! middle, centre (V:376), although no intensification as such is apparent from the translation. Note that we dont find a fortification of the first consonant in this example. LOS! dream (V:379) is an elaboration of LOS! sleep (V:370); and though no direct intensification of the root is apparent from the translation, the means used to derive the more particular from the more general notion is reminiscent of DER! adult male > *ENDER bridegroom or NIS! woman > INDIS! bride. No example with a sundma u can be found in the Etymologies, but in XI:389 we see uruk! as a variant of RUKU, indicating that probably u had no special role as such. All in all, the idea that this particular formation pattern is mostly relevant for roots and not so much for fully formed words seems to work out, though. There is no clear line as to what the meaning of the intensification is supposed to be the most common outcome seems to be a particular out of the general class of objects denoted by the non-intensified form, but even that is not always true.
Under N! , Tolkien describes for Qenya an intensive prefix as a blend of a! prefix + dynamic lengthening and a base-vowel + nasal initials and of the syllabic forms of nasal initials as #bar. The resulting prefix takes the shape an! before vowels (rare); um before p , q, v ( umb); an before t, l (=d , and ), r ( arr ), l ( all), s ( ass), w ( u! ) ( anw ); i before k, g and hence = before vowel ( ink , ing ). The entry l (=d ) presumably indicates that when a Qenya word-initial l is derived from a root with D! that this consonant reappears when the prefix is added. In addition, the entry provides the examples umpano build, inkale radiance, Sun, antara very lofty, Antaro a name and unquale agony. Considering e.g. umpano and the root PAN! place, set, fix in place (V:380) we see that this is indeed distinct from the simple prefixion of the sundma , which would yield *APAN! . Thus, the quality of the vowel of this intensive prefix depends on the quality of the initial consonant of the root. In Noldorin this prefix appears as a with dynamic lengthening afarch , angol ( aol! ), referring to the unintensified park , ol . The first of these Noldorin examples can be found under the entry PRAK! (V:380) meaning dry, the second under OL! smell meaning stench (V:378). We will come back to the meaning of the dynamic lengthening shortly. Note that angol again shows development different from simple prefixion of the base vowel the sundma is o and yet a is used as the prefix. We find a (possible) change in this scheme in VT46:6 where we learn that angol , aol! appear to have had their initial vowel altered, possibly to ongol and ool! respectively. Thus, Tolkien here seems to have blurred the distinction even more and introduced a system in Noldorin in which the sundma was prefixed, combined with a dynamic lengthening of the initial consonant of the root. However, if we look at entry A! (which according to Christopher Tolkiens chronology would be the latest), aol! reappears, so this was probably a transient idea. In this later entry we learn that the prefix is indeed a! (in Noldorin; for Qenya see below) and we learn how the dynamic lengthening proceeds, e.g. park" dry, ON parkha , N parch , but appark" arid, very dry; ON apparkha , N afarch . Thus, dynamic lengthening seems to imply that the consonant is doubled in the CE stage and the subsequent phonetic developments are carried through to Noldorin. We may thus e.g. expect c! > ach!, t! > ath!, p! > aph! > af!, s! > ass! , n! > ann! , m! > amm! and possibly g! > ang! , b! > amb!, d! > and!. This is confirmed by N angos horror, a + dynamic goss! where g is dynamic length[ening] = gg (VT45:15). Owing to the relation with N! , the prefix would conceivably become an! before vowels. Note that there is likely a similarity to the effects of nasal mutation for a prefix *an! . The Qenya evolution likewise undergoes a revision the prefix is now said to be an , am , a , a generalized form. We see this in action in amparka very dry (where the historical form *apparka is rejected), antara very high and ankale radiance. The last example is especially interesting, as it apparently replaces inkale , confirming that Tolkien abandoned the concept of having a different vowel dependent on the initial consonant. There are still some traces of this phenomenon left, though we learn that un, um appear before q , p , b , but owing to the influence of $! used only in an evil sense, as unquale agony, a strengthened form to the root KWAL! die in pain (V:366).
environments as here further > ei , cf. the plural pattern alph > eilph, UT:265) and would hence involve a prefix an . The same prefix may be seen in Cuio i Pheriain anann! (LR:932) may the Halflings live long! (L:308) thiat is, if anann is not to be interpreted as dative an + and for [a] long [time] but instead as an intensified form anann exceedingly long. Neither interpretation is supported over the other by the actual translation. XI:311, 315 has the forms thent/ estent , possibly meaning short/?very short. If the latter is indeed an intensified form, it clearly is interesting. Should we assume that this reflects a prefix e with the consequent re-emergence (actually, preservation) of the original initial root consonants st! in internal position? This would not be a straightforward development, since the root is apparently STINT"! and so the sundma would be i and the historically correct form would seem to be *istinta > istent (as a-affection doesnt occur throughout the whole word, cf. silim" > silef not **selef , V:385). But the prefixed vowel could then well be subject to analogical leveling, patterned after forms like thel/estel, XI:318 or thanc/nestegi , V:388 which show that the re-emergence of the original root consonants in the presence of a prefix is not uncommon. Tolkien also considered the fully analogical form #ethen shorter in V:192 in which the original cluster did not re-emerge. On the other hand, an original a! prefix might be i -affected by the sundma i before itself being changed by a-affection, i.e. *astinta > *estinta > estent ; but this is not a likely explanation as it would require that i -affection and a-affection did not act in the usual order. Thus, the most likely conclusion is that we observe an intensification of the CE root here. The pair thr stiff grass and gwastar hummock, V:388, with the re-emergence of the original consonant cluster in the presence of the prefix gwawhich is used only in old cmps., V:399, seems to support the idea that the re-emergence of root consonants is typical for old formations and that estent would therefore not be recent.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank Carl F. Hostetter and Florian Lothenon Dombach for interesting discussions and valuable comments leading to this article.
Bibliography
Hostetter, Carl F. and Patrick H. Wynne. Addenda and Corrigenda to the Etymologies Part One. Published in Vinyar Tengwar 45, Nov. 2003. Hostetter, Carl F. and Patrick H. Wynne. Addenda and Corrigenda to the Etymologies Part Two. Published in Vinyar Tengwar 46, Jul. 2004. Fauskanger, Helge K. Primitive Elvish Where It All Began. Published in Ardalambion . http://www.uib.no/People/hnohf/primelv.htm. See also the general Tengwesti Bibliography.
Change Log
2008-11-08 14:27:27: Formatting changes only: converted text to Gentium/Basic, deprecated all Gentium tags, converted combining diacritics to modifiers where possible
Copyright 2006 Thorsten Renk Quotations from the works of J.R.R. or Christopher Tolkien are the copyright of their publishers and/or the Tolkien Estate, and are used here with their kind permission. The word TOLKIEN is a registered trademark of The J.R.R. Tolkien Estate Limited. The characters and scripts of Tolkiens invented languages and works in those languages are
characters and scripts of Tolkiens invented languages and works in those languages are the copyright of the Tolkien Estate. URL: http://www.elvish.org/Tengwestie/articles/Renk/noldintenspref.phtml First published on March 6th, 2006 Last modified on Saturday, November 8th, 2008 1:50 pm PST