Quenya Adjectives
From UniLang Wiki
Contents |
Introduction
Quenya has 3 types of adjectives depending on their final letter:
- adjectives on -a:
- alta "big"
- corna "round"
- larca "swift, rapid"
- raica "bent"
- farëa "enough"
- adjectives on -ë:
- leucë "sick"
- ninquë "white"
- carnë "red"
- adjectives on -n; most end in -in but some in -en:
- marin "ripe"
- qualin "dead"
- peren "patient"
Adjectives are mostly placed in front of the noun to which they belong:
- larca sírë "a rapid river"
- i ninquë fanya "the white cloud"
It can also be put behind its noun if you wish to emphasize the adjective:
- mallë raica "a bent (and not straight) road"
With a proper noun the adjectives are always put behind the noun:
- Elendil Voronda "Elendil (the) Faithful, Faithful Elendil"
Adjectives can also be used predicatively with the verb ná:
- i parma ná carnë "the book is red"
In such short sentences ná (or nar) are often omitted:
- i parma carnë "the book is red"
Plural
Adjectives have only one plural form; it is used whenever the noun it belongs to is not singular (so dual, plural and partitive plural make no difference for the adjective):
- carni parmar "red books"
- carni parmat "a pair of red books"
- carni parmali "some red books"
Predicatively used adjectives are in the plural whenever the subject refers to more than one person or thing:
- i ciryar nar ninqui "the ships are white"
- i aran ar i tári nar altë "the king and queen are big"
Formation of the plural:
- adjectives in -a but not in -ëa:
- alta → altë "big"
- corna → cornë "round"
- raica → raicë "bent"
- adjectives in -ëa:
- farëa → farië "enough"
- laurëa → laurië "golden"
- adjectives in -ë:
- leucë → leuci "sick"
- ninquë → ninqui "white"
- adjectives in -n have two possible forms:
- marin → marini/marindi "ripe"
- qualin → qualini/qualindi "dead"
- peren → pereni/perendi "patient"
One adjective is irregular:
- maitë → maisi "handy"
Inflected adjectives
In Quenya there are only 2 occurances in which the adjectives are inflected:
- when the adjective is used as a noun
- when the adjective immediately follows its noun
In all other places an adjective only has 2 forms: singular and plural (see above).
Examples and paradigms can be found on a separate page: Quenya Inflected adjectives.
Comparative
Quenya uses two different comparatives: relative and absolute.
relative comparison
When we use an adjective in a relative comparison, it is preceded by lá but its form doesn’t change:
- Oromë ná halla lá Mandos "Orome is longer than Mandos"
- Anar ná calima lá Isil "The sun is brighter than the moon"
Note: lá is also used to negate a verb, so it can appear with both meanings in one sentence:
- macilenya ná lá hastaina lá macilerya "my sword is not sharper than your sword"
absolute comparison
If on the other hand the comparison is used absolutively, we have a special ending –lda:
- Oromë ná hallalda "Orome is longer"
So these comparatives are always adjectives on –a and follow the rules of these adjectives:
- laiqualdë peleri "greener fields"
To apply the ending to adjectives on –ë we use their I-stem:
- ninquë "white" → ninquilda
and adjectives on –in/-en get the ending –ilda:
- melin "dear" → melinilda
Finally, a few are irregular:
- mára/manë "good" → malda "better"
- vanya "beautiful, fair" → valda "more beatiful, fairer"
- ulca "bad" → ulda "worse"
- faica "bad" → felda "worse"
- limba "many" → lilda "more"
- olya "much" → olda "more"
and the diminutive:
- manca "few" → mitsa "less"
Superlative
The superlative is formed by applying the prefix an- to the adjective:
- calima "clear" → ancalima "clearest"
- vinya "new" → anvinya "newest"
This prefix cannot be applied to every adjective as otherwise unallowed consonant clusters could appear. It can be prefixed to adjectives beginning in: a vowel, c-, n-, qu-, t-, v-, w-, y-, f-, h-.
- alta "big" → analta "biggest"
- nindë "fragile" → annindë "most fragile"
- quenta "full" → anquanta "fullest"
- wilwa "vague" → anwilwa "vaguest"
- yelwa "loathsome" → anyelwa "most loathsome"
- furin "hidden" → anfurin "most hidden"
- halla "long" → anhalla "longest"
When an adjective begins in p- the prefix becomes am-:
- pitya "small, little" → ampitya "smallest"
Before l-, m-, r-, s- the n of an- changes into an double consonant:
- lauca "warm" → allauca "warmest"
- ringa "cold" → arringa "coldest"
- sarda "hard" → assarda "hardest"
- marin "ripe" → ammarin "ripest"
But when we look at the historical development of Quenya, a large group of adjectives must have 'historical' irregularities, e.g.
- vanya "beautiful" → ambanya "most beautiful"
We will look at these on a separate page: historical superlatives.
