- 10.034 to cargoes and gold,
10.038 and of cargoes of rich presents
10.040 up the Forest River with their cargoes,
word
Caress
- 13.032 caressing and fingering them.
Carcase
- 14.043 that fell from his rotting carcase.
(The American spelling of this word is “carcass”.)
Merriam-Webster. Merriam-Webster, n.d. Web. Various dates May, June, and July, 2015.
Carc
Say it aloud! This name is a sound-play word – hinting that the Raven language is still spoken all around us and we have lost the wit to understand.
Tolkien writes in his Essay on Phonetic Symbolism about the origin of this name – and of his father’s
rook is no longer krāg or krāk or χrk from which it took its use.
- 15.010 old Carc
- 15.014 I am Roäc son of Carc.
- 15.014 Carc is dead,
- 15.021 Roäc Carc’s son.
Tolkien, J. R. R.. A Secret Vice: Tolkien on Invented Languages (Kindle Locations 1954-1955). HarperCollins Publishers. Kindle Edition.
Caper
From capriole, a skip or leap, still used of horses.
- 15.016 and began to caper about for joy.
Harper, Douglas. Online Etymology Dictionary. Web.
Bywater
- 02.010 Bywater, at 11 a.m. sharp.
- 02.020 when he got to Bywater
Buttertub
- 09.048 if the king’s full buttertubs
Butterfly
- 08.042 and they were after the butterflies.
- 08.042 and there were everywhere hundreds of butterflies.
- 08.042 a butterfly that loves the tops of oak-woods,
- 08.045 They did not care tuppence about the butterflies,
Butcher
- 06.099 being used to having it delivered by the butcher all ready to cook.
Bustle
- 09.064 in the general bustle.
- 10.036 in the general bustle.