Subject: It's the exception.
Author:
Posted on: 2013-10-22 21:14:00 UTC
The 'lordly' ending in Quenya, from all I can tell, is -on. It's one of the only non-vowel, non-r Quenya endings I know of, and I can't think of a whole lot of uses of it. Aldaron, as you say, but even the Sindarin names like Fingon and Turgon are actually from Findekano and Turukano. Soron, 'eagle', has the same -n (and I guess derives from something like súrë-on, 'Wind-Lord').
Actually, -n can also be the ending for 'I', or -on can be (apparently) the genitive plural. But yeah, Quenya doesn't end in consonants too often... on the Quenya Reverse Wordlist, of the 77 pages:
-25 are words that end in -a
-20 are words ending in -e
-2 are words ending in -i (but a lot of plurals use this)
-5 ending in -o
-9 end in -r
-And the remaining 16 pages cover the other 21 letters of the alphabet (all right, Quenya lacks the letter B, but still...)
Yeah... Quenya likes certain letters.
hS
PS: Also, according to the Encyclopedia of Arda, Christopher Tolkien has since said that 'Aldaron' was an outdated word he shouldn't have put in the published Silmarillion. So there's that. ~hS