- 03.035 and he said: “These are not troll-make.
Not found in OED.
Not found in OED.
It’s an uncommon use of a common word! It will carry the “10K” tag until such time as I add the common uses of “before”. It’s not terribly likely that I will, as Blackwelder kept prepositions out of this Tolkien Thesaurus.
No such word in OED.
Given that Hobbits are much smaller than adult men and women, I am amused that their beer-mugs are larger than a standard bottle of beer in my experience.
This is a two-word word in its OED headword, but hyphenated in some of the examples.
“beer, n.1.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2017. Web. 5 September 2017.
Hyphenated in its sub-entry in OED.
Probably not the best place to hide as a dwarf who had gone to the cellar is most likely to be looking to fill the pitcher. “Beer-barrels” is a hyphenated word which is properly a two-words in the OED under “beer”, but hyphenated straightforwardly under “barrel”.
“beer, n.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, March 2015. Web. 1 Juy 2015.
“barrel, n.” OED Online. Oxford University Press, June 2017. Web. 5 September 2017.
Not found in OED.
Beech is any one of about a dozen species in the genus Fagaceae.
Obviously this means “logs of beech wood”, but “beech-log” is not in OED, nor is “beech log” one of those two-word words so stuck together that they get their own entry. This hyphenated form is JRRT original.
Twenty, combined with all the ordinals or cardinals below ten, takes the hyphen according to OED.
“twenty, adj. and n.” OED Online, Oxford University Press, June 2017, http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/208007. Accessed 21 September 2017.