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i+went

  • 1 WENT

    lendë (departed) (past tense of lelya-/lenna- "go") LT1:264 gives vá, but this is probably not a valid word in LotR-style Quenya. –LED cf. VT45:27, WJ:363

    Quettaparma Quenyallo (English-Quenya) > WENT

  • 2 LEAVE

    (vb) auta- (go away, pass), pa.t. oantë, oantië (in the physical sense "went away [to another place]") or vánë ("the most frequently used past [tense]" – less "physical" than oantë, meaning "disappeared" rather than "went away"), perf. avánië (pl avánier is attested); perf. vánië with no augment may occur in verse. For "leave", Etym also has lesta, pa.t. lendë; this is also the past tense of "go". The stem from which lesta- is derived was "replaced" by another. Lesta has a wholly different meaning in later writings; see GIRDLE, MEASURE. LEAVE OUT hehta- (pa.t. hehtanë is given but seems perfectly regular) (put aside, exclude, abandon, forsake) –WJ:366, ELED (noun) – with leave of: lenémë (+ genitive)

    Quettaparma Quenyallo (English-Quenya) > LEAVE

  • 3 OVER

    or. With reference to movement over something (hence in effect *“across”), Tolkien considered the form olla “over” (= beyond, of things passed over, as in “I went over a river” or “they went over the hill”) –PE17:65 For "over" in the sense past, see PAST AND OVER. –UT:305

    Quettaparma Quenyallo (English-Quenya) > OVER

  • 4 AWAY

    oa, oar (viewed from the point of view of the thing, person, or place left). Oar is used of movement only, as in "I went away". See also GO AWAY. –WJ:366 cf. 361, VT39:6.

    Quettaparma Quenyallo (English-Quenya) > AWAY

  • 5 GO

    lelya- or lenna- (pa.t. lendë in both cases; the printed Etymologies gives "linna" instad of lenna-, but according to VT45:27 this is a misreading) (proceed, travel); \#men- (attested in the aorist: menë "goes"), vanya- (pa.t. vannë) (depart, disappear – it may be that Tolkien abandoned the verb vanya-, if it is regarded as the conceptual predecessor of auta-, see GO AWAY below), GO ROUND pel- (revolve, return; the Silmarillion Appendix also mentions “encircle” as a meaning of the root PEL, cf. also “Qenya” pele- “surround, fence in, pen in”; pa.t. pellë given, QL:73). GO OVER, see CROSS. GO ATHWART tara- (cross); GO AWAY auta- (leave, pass); pa.t. oantë, perf. oantië (in the physical sense "went away [to another place]", vánë ("the most frequently used past [tense]" – less "physical" than oantë, rather meaning to be lost or to disappear), also anwë (this pa.t. was "only found in archaic language"), perf. avánië (pl. avánier is attested); perf. vánië with no augment may occur in verse. GO FORTH TOWARDS (with the thing approached as direct object) tenta-, pa.t. tentanë (the verb can also mean “direct toward” or “be directed toward”, in the intransitive tense apparently with the pa.t. tenantë). CAUSE TO GO (in a desired direction) menta- (send), GONE vanwa (departed, vanished, dead, lost, past and over, no longer to be had) BE GONE! heca! – also with pronominal affixes: sg hecat, pl hecal "you be gone!" (stand aside!) LET GO lerya- (release, set free), sen- (let loose, free) –WJ:363, LED/VT45:27, VT47:11, 30, PEL, LT2:347, WAN, Nam, WJ:364, VT41:5, VT49:23, WJ:366, VT41:5, VT43:18

    Quettaparma Quenyallo (English-Quenya) > GO

  • 6 OUR

    As described in the entry WE, the 3rd person pl. pronouns distinguish plural forms from dual (depending on whether two or more persons are involved) and exclusive forms from inclusive (depending on whether the party addressed is included in “we/our”). Tolkien revised the relevant endings repeatedly. According to one late resolution described in VT49:16, the endings for exclusive “our” are –lma in the plural and –mma as a dual form, hence *aldalma “our tree” (with an “our” of at least three persons, not including the party addressed), but *aldamma “our tree = my and one other person’s tree”. The corresponding inclusive forms are –lwa (plural) and –ngwa (dual). Since the subject ending corresponding to the former is attested as “-lwe, –lve” (VT49:51), –lwa can surely also appear as *-lva, as in *omentielva “our meeting” (attested in the genitive case: omentielvo “of our meeting”, WJ:367). Hence *aldalwa/aldalva “our tree” (an “our” of at least three persons, including the party addressed), dual *aldangwa “our tree = thy and my tree”. – An independent word for plural exclusive "our" appears in VT43:19, 35: menya (also menyë modifying a plural noun). The corresponding plural inclusive form should apparently be *venya (pl. *venyë) for archaic *wenya (pl. wenyai > wenyë). The dual forms would most likely be *mentya (excl.) and *ventya (incl.); compare me, we/ve as the independent pronouns for “we” (with dual forms met, wet/*vet and dative forms *ment, * went/vent, from which the independent possessive pronouns are apparently derived by adding the adjectival ending -ya). – Notice that in an earlier conceptual phase, the forms in –mm- were plural (not as later dual) inclusive, and the forms in –lm- were plural inclusive rather than exclusive. This is why the word translated “of our meeting” appeared as omentielmo in the first edition of LotR, but was changed to omentielvo in the Second Edition. Cf. also Átaremma “our Father” as the first word of Tolkien’s translation of the Lord’s Prayer (VT43:12); this “our” is obviously meant to be plural exclusive rather than dual as it later became (according to Tolkien’s later conventions, “our Father” would be *Átarelma when a group of three or more persons addresses a party not included in “our”, in this case the Father himself).

    Quettaparma Quenyallo (English-Quenya) > OUR

  • 7 PASS

    (vb.) auta- (leave, go away); pa.t. oantë, oantië (in the physical sense "went away [to another place]", vánë ("the most frequently used past [tense]" – less "physical" than oantë, meaning *"disappeared" rather than "passed away"), also anwë (this pa.t. was "only found in archaic language"), perf. avánië (pl. avánier is attested); perf. vánië with no augment may occur in verse. –WJ:366; for the gloss "pass" see Silm:229 – mountain pass: falqua (cleft, ravine); pass between hills: cilya (cleft, gorge) (so in Etym, but \#cirya in the name Calacirya "Pass of Light" [gen. Calaciryo in Namárië] – though this clashes with cirya "ship". An early version of Namárië actually had Calacilyo not Calaciryo; see An Introduction to Elvish p. 5) –LT2:341, KIL

    Quettaparma Quenyallo (English-Quenya) > PASS

См. также в других словарях:

  • Went the Day Well ? — Went the Day Well? Went the Day Well? Titre original Went the Day Well? Réalisation Alberto Cavalcanti Acteurs principaux Leslie Banks Elizabeth Allan Scénario John Dighton Angus MacPhail Diana Morgan d après une nouvelle de Graham Greene Genre …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Went the Day Well? — Données clés Titre original Went the Day Well? Réalisation Alberto Cavalcanti Scénario John Dighton Angus MacPhail Diana Morgan d après une nouvelle de Graham Greene Acteurs principaux Leslie Banks …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Went — is a surname and may refer to: * Frits Went (1863 1935), Dutch botanist * Frits Warmolt Went (1903 1990), Dutch biologist * Johanna Went, US Performance Artist * John Stewart Went (1944 ), Anglican Bishop of Tewkesbury * Joseph J. Went (1930 ),… …   Wikipedia

  • went — (wĕnt) v. ▸ Past tense of GO(Cf. ↑go)1. ╂ [Middle English, from Old English wende, past tense and past participle of wendan, to go.] Word History: Why do we say went and not goed? Go has always had an unusual past tense, formed from a completely… …   Word Histories

  • Went — Went, n. Course; way; path; journey; direction. [Obs.] At a turning of a wente. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] But here my weary team, nigh overspent, Shall breathe itself awhile after so long a went. Spenser. [1913 Webster] He knew the diverse went of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Went — Went, imp. & p. p. of {Wend}; now obsolete except as the imperfect of go, with which it has no etymological connection. See {Go}. [1913 Webster] To the church both be they went. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • went gone out with the ark — went/had gone out with the ark British & Australian, humorous if an object or method went out with the ark, it is not used any more. These old manual printing presses went out with the ark everything s computerized these days …   New idioms dictionary

  • went — [went] [Date: 1400 1500; Origin: From the old past tense of wend] the past tense of ↑go …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • went — past tense of GO (Cf. go); originally past tense and pp. of WEND (Cf. wend). The original past tense forms of wend were wende, wended, but variants wente, went developed from c.1200 and began to replace older past tenses of go. By c.1500 they… …   Etymology dictionary

  • went — [went] vi., vt. [old pt. of WEND, used to replace missing form of GO1] pt. of GO1 …   English World dictionary

  • went — /went/, v. 1. pt. of go. 2. Nonstandard. a pp. of go1. 3. Archaic. a pt. and pp. of wend. * * * …   Universalium

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