Subject: Interesting! Let's investigate.
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Posted on: 2019-08-22 09:35:00 UTC

Per Eldamo, and thence per the Qenya Lexicon, comes from the Primitive Quendian root QAHA. That root also gave us the words qaina, 'wailing', and - I kid you not - qaqa-, 'to quack or cackle' (past tense qanqe- or qāqe). It doesn't have any known Gnomish/Noldorin derivations.

Alqa, meanwhile, comes from the root (I)ḶKḶ, with dots underneath the Ls for some reason. From that root we get Primitive Quendian alchwa, 'swan', which gives rise to Gnomish alfa and Qenya alqa, both meaning 'swan'. It also, by some weird process, gives Qenya ilk-, 'to seem', and ilke, 'appearance'; what that means for the original meaning of the root, I don't know.

So does that bump 'white duck' on the head? Maybe not! Or rather, it does the 'white' part, which in Qenya would probably be 'nin-'. But 'ala' is a verb for 'to grow', and also a word meaning 'wing' - as well as an interjection, 'behold!'. Any one of those could reasonably combine with 'duck' to give alqa.

So what we'd be looking at would be a folk etymology which altered the pronunciation of the word. "What's with all those weird dots under the Ls?" the young Elves would ask. "Why are you trying to get 'swan' from 'appearance'? It's clearly big duck! Alqaaaaaaa, alqaaaaa."

And that is why I now believe that the 'a' vowel in Qenya mutated over time into a long 'a', but only when it followed a q.

Because of the ducks.

hS

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