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==Etymology==
==Etymology==


The [[Sindarin]] word ''naith'' is glossed as "angle".<ref>{{PE|17}}, p. 55</ref>
The [[Sindarin]] word ''naith'', glossed as "angle", is derived from ''nek-tē'' (root [[NEK]]). Its [[Quenya]] form is ''nehte''.<ref>{{PE|17}}, p. 55</ref> In ''[[The Etymologies]]'' the word is glossed as "gore" and appears as a [[Noldorin]] word (the procursor of Sindarin), derived from the roots SNAS-/SNAT-. Other words derived from that root have the meaning of "spear-head, point, triangle", including a sketch of an arrow-head.<ref>{{LR|Etymologies}}</ref>


The literal meaning was "spear-point", but over time it came to be used by the [[Elves]] for all manner of sharp or spear-like objects.{{fact}}
The English gloss ''[[Wiktionary:gore#Etymology_3|gore]]'' is a rare word which describes any of a wide range of narrow or pointed items, originally a narrow triangular piece of land.
 
[[J.R.R. Tolkien|Tolkien]] translates ''naith'' into English using the word ''gore'' (meaning "sharp point"), a very close equivalent. Just like ''naith'', ''gore'' can describe any of a wide range of narrow or pointed items, though it is now so rarely used that many readers find it almost as obscure as its [[Elvish]] equivalent. Its etymology goes back in time to Old English ''gára'' (a word for a narrow triangular piece of land) so Haldir's translation is a very precise one.{{fact}}


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Latest revision as of 02:59, 17 April 2017

The Naith of Lórien was a wedge-shaped land between the Rivers Celebrant and Anduin, where Egladil, the heartlands of Lothlórien lay, and its capital Caras Galadhon was found.[1]

Gore was Haldir's translation of the Elvish name Naith.

Etymology[edit | edit source]

The Sindarin word naith, glossed as "angle", is derived from nek-tē (root NEK). Its Quenya form is nehte.[2] In The Etymologies the word is glossed as "gore" and appears as a Noldorin word (the procursor of Sindarin), derived from the roots SNAS-/SNAT-. Other words derived from that root have the meaning of "spear-head, point, triangle", including a sketch of an arrow-head.[3]

The English gloss gore is a rare word which describes any of a wide range of narrow or pointed items, originally a narrow triangular piece of land.

References