Valonqar: Difference between revisions

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{{C|hval|Male family members}}
{{C|hval|Male family members}}


[[Category:High Valyrian 3-syllable words]]
{{cln|hval|3-syllable words}}


[[Category:High Valyrian words created by George R. R. Martin]]
[[Category:High Valyrian words created by George R. R. Martin]]

Revision as of 02:20, 16 December 2023

High Valyrian

Etymology

From an invisible proto-language
The etymology of this word comes from an invisible proto-language. If you're confident you know the etymology, feel free to add it, but reader beware should the etymology be added by someone other than the creator of the language!

Source

Coined by George R. R. Martin in the book A Feast for Crows.

Source Spelling

valonqar

Pronunciation

(Classical) IPA(key): /vaˈloɴqar/

Noun

valonqar (first declension aquatic, nominative plural valonqri)

  1. younger brother, brother
    Se kejo syt ñuho valonqro drōmon laodigon bēviltas?
    And this required you to steal my brother’s egg?
    -Rhaenyra (House of the Dragon, Episode 102)
  2. younger male cousin by father's brother or mother's sister, younger male parallel cousin, cousin
Inflection
Singular Plural Paucal Collective
Nominative valonqar valonqri valonqrun valonqrar
Accusative valonqri valonqrī valonqruni valonqrari
Genitive valonqro valonqroti valonqruno valonqraro
Dative valonqrot valonqrunta valonqrarta
Locative valonqār valonqrunna valonqrarra
Instrumental valonqrosa valonqrossi valonqrussa valonqrarza
Comitative valonqroma valonqrommi valonqrumma valonqrarma
Vocative valonqus valonqis valonqrussa valonqrarza

Creation and Usage Notes

This word, of course, is one of the few words of High Valyrian created by George R. R. Martin. It figures in one of the most famous prophecies of the books which claims that the valonqar will choke the life out of Cersei Lannister. There have been a lot of theories about this word, given that Tyrion is Cersei's younger brother and Jaime is the younger twin, but one of the more interesting fan theories is that valonqar means younger brother or younger sister, and so someone like Arya might end up killing Cersei. When I built this language, I didn't imagine that George R. R. Martin had intended words such as this one to apply to more than one gender. Should it turn out to be the case, I will take it upon myself to emend the language so that it jives with Martin's work, as he is the ultimate authority on the world and characters he created.

-David J. Peterson 16:00, 15 January 2020 (PST)