Dārilaros

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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!

Pronunciation

(Classical) IPA(key): /daːriˈlaros/

Rhymes: -aros

Noun

dārilaros (third declension solar, nominative plural dārilarossa)

  1. heir to the throne (irrespective of biological sex or perceived gender)
  2. crown princess or prince
    Ziry kīviō dārilaros issa.
    S/he is the prince that was promised.
  3. prince
    Dārilaros Daemon sikio sīdas, Eglivys Aōhys
    It was Prince Daemon who was the culprit, Your Grace…
    -Dragonkeeper Elder (House of the Dragon, Episode 102)
Inflection
Singular Plural Paucal Collective
Nominative dārilaros dārilarossa dārilarun dārilaror
Accusative dārilaruni dārilarori
Genitive dārilaro dārilaroti dārilaruno dārilaroro
Dative dārilarot dārilarunto
Locative dārilarunno dārilarorro
Instrumental dārilaroso dārilarossi dārilarusso dārilarorzo
Comitative dārilarummo dārilarormo
Vocative dārilaros dārilarossas dārilarusso dārilarorzo
Related Terms

Creation and Usage Notes

In A Feast for Crows Maester Aemon says that dragons can change their sex (like seahorses), and consequently the prince who was promised could very well be the princess who was promised. He notes that the language misled everyone, by which he means the usage of the Common Tongue (i.e. English) word "prince" (a royal son, not daughter) in the translation of the prophecy. Following this logic, the original High Valyrian word should be able to be translated as either prince or princess. Hence, dārilaros: a royal heir, sex not specified.

I've found it, shall we say, amusing that many people who have read A Feast for Crows and read this passage have come to the conclusion that Valyrian should be a language without gender (and, in so doing, confused the crucial distinction between grammatical gender and biological sex). Perhaps, like the Westerosi, George R. R. Martin's figurative language misled them.

-David J. Peterson 15:49, 7 November 2019 (PST)