… Tolkien states that “the suffix -ath (originally a collective noun-suffix) was used as a group plural, embracing all things of the same name, or those associated in some special arrangement or organization. So elenath (as plural of êl, [irregular] pl. elin) meant ‘the host of the stars’ …
Yet another ending is -hoth “folk, host, horde”, … The Silmarillion Appendix (entry hoth) states that this ending is “nearly always used in a bad sense” … The one who first called the Snowmen of Forochel Lossoth (for \Loss-hoth, *loss = “snow”) evidently did not like them.
I tend to think of y’all as the Lessiath (no relation) or LessWrongenath but it doesn’t work as well in verbal conversation.
Lessirim seems more euphonious, but I get why you wouldn’t like the connotation.
Edit: Goodness, “Lessoth” is practically canon! And the self-deprecatory implications… my new favorite word.
Google is not turning up much for “lessoth” or “lessiath”. Can you explain?
- Sindarin, the Noble Tongue
Relevant username is relevant.
Yay we’re an Eldritch Abomination!
êl : star :: elenath : all the stars (in the sky)