Were you trying to say "that was beautiful"? "Gad" is a conjunction, not a pronoun. Dwarven has no pronouns, so there is no word for "that". You need to use a noun instead. Perhaps "writing belonging to Solitarian"? Except Dwarven has no word for "writing"... oh, that limited lexicon is annoying.
I could merely say "vargeth kinem" and leave it up to context maybe? Lol
If I needed to be clearer we could use Tathur (scribe) as a verb to write and then writing.
So a bit clearer would be "Tathur vargeth kinem" and even clearer would be TathurlongSolitarian vargeth kinem, though for most intents and purposes people would usually stick to simplicity (like how the Japanese in common speech rarely use pronouns simply because they are unwieldy). Could be good to make something that differentiates writing from to write. There is already a prefix used to create agents from non-agent words (ù[n]- as in Ùnil) There could be something like that which would differentiate a word from an abstract concept derived from it. Something like English -ship, -hood and -ity.
Maybe Mïk- as in Mïkstal (Ownership). I chose Mïk- because it is only found in Ownership at the beginning of a word and -stal doesn't mean anything else (so it could be a more formal word for "to own" (contrasting with sanreb). So you can say Urist sanrebgath Shokmug or Urist stalgath Shokmug and it means the same thing. I thought of other prefixes like Az- (because of Azmol and Azoth), but -oth already means something completely unrelated to Azoth. They COULD of course be homophones but I prefer not to create confusion in the language unnecessarily unless you want to make some rules to explain it. For example, you could make that when you attach the Az- to the word the main vowel changes, so Azoth would come from, for example, óth and not oth. But that's kinda unnecessary and we could simply explain it by saying Azoth is just an irregular word that doesn't use Mïk-
The phrase would then be: Mïktathur vargeth kinem (Writing, aka Scribeship, scribecraft, etc).
That can be used for our favorite phrase too: Mïkrigòtharkim Craftsdwarfship. So the phrase "All craftsdwarfship is of the highest quality" would be something like: "Mïkrigòtharkim mulonak varudiz teleshonmïkkoth'ok" lit. [Abstract concept]+craft+dwarf all be+[Present] [superlative]+good+[abstract concept]+to analyse quality+in or Craftsdwarfship all is in best quality. I made up the word for to analyse something's quality as koth and with it made Mïkkoth, Quality. You can change it if you want lol koth could also mean to appraise and appraisal when a noun. Ùkoth could mean appraiser. Could also be a word for to inspect and Ùkoth also mean Inspector. So a person who sees if regulations are being kept (Össekùkoth) or a person who makes sure taxes are being collected (Stettadùkoth), while also being used for someone who appraises what jewel one has and its worth (Kadôlùkoth). A police inspector could be a Toralùkoth. Words that could be used with Mïk:
Mïketar - Kingship, the office of being King
Mïkerar - Leadership
Mïkellest - Kinship
It could also serve in a similar fashion as our -ism :
Mïkemär - Animalism
Another suggestion is to create place names using Zoden (house). It could also be shortened to -zod (there are currently no word in Dwarfish that ends in -zod so it wouldn't cause confusion). As in:
Nelzod(en) - Bakery, also called Ímzod
Imkethzod(en) - Court-House
Fidgamzod(en) - Congress house
Eshtânzod(en) - Smithy
Baroszod(en) - Funeral home
Rakustzod(en) - Cemitary
Turelzod(en) - School
Thîkutzod(en) - University or another word for School (Library already exists as a seperate word) Bookstore could be Thîkutrilbet
Mishthemzod(en) - Laboratory
Koshzod(en) - Slaughter House
Lokastzod(en) - Butchery
(Tel)saràmzod(en) - City Hall (the Mayor's office) Telsaràm could mean mayor (it means Greatest and is pretty much an etymological translation of Mayor which came from Major, in other words "Very Important" or "Greatest") and his office be either the "Great House" (Saràmzod) or the "Mayorial House" (Telsaràmzod). Another word for mayor could also be Serarkim (Head dwarf), or just Ser. And the word for City Hall be Serzod
Idräthzod(en) - Treasury
Duthnurzod(en) - Guardhouse
Ezarzod(en) - Garrison
Âmzod(en) - Auditorium
Ralzod(en) - Bank (there is a word for bank in Dwarfish, Gérig, but I STRONGLY advise using it only for geographical features like riverbank because we don't have a seperate word for that and it is much easier to form a word for (money) Bank than (river) bank)
Kinemzod(en) - Salon, beauty parlour
Duradzod(en) - Barbershop. I imagine there being dwarves completely specialized in only doing beards and making them as great as dwarvenly possible. A Kinemzod would be less specialized and thus cheaper.
Zustzod(en) - Dormitory
Lanlarzod(en) - Aviarium. I'd call bird-houses Lanlarbom, emphasising it as a place where they live.
Bobrurzod(en) - Maternity house
Ikûlzod(en) - generic term for a coop (chicken coop for example). The word Ikûl can be substituted for the word for chicken or peacock or turkey depending on specialization (whenever those words enter the vocabulary lol)
Bisólzod(en) - Elderly Home, Hospice Home, Asylum (place).
Gidurzod(en) - Museum
Zalstomzod(en) - Pharmacy
Ikalzod(en) - Hospital, in poetry also called Ilonzod
Cilobzod(en) - an above ground house, what humans usually mean when they say "house"
Dákzod(en) - those monstrocities elves live in
Ibrukzod(en) - Ashery
Inodzod(en) - Gatehouse
Ivomzod(en) - the room where you keep your farm plots. Given that dwarves mostly farm indoors it is natural that there is a word for it.
Kadôlzod(en) - Jewelry shop
Kalurzod(en) - Throne room
Kegethzod(en) - storage room
Maszod(en) - grainery
Tathurzod(en) - Scriptorium
Lolorzod(en) - Post Office
Lolumzod(en) - Carpentry shop
Mugshithzod(en) - Torture room
Namàshzod(en) - Brewery
Ramtakzod(en) - Execution room
Ngitkarzod(en) - Fishery
Ninurzod(en) - Probably a more lowkey word for Brothel. How posh people would call it
Nishzod(en) - Generic word for "shop" or "store"
Nitomzod(en) - Observatory, Planetarium, also called a Vîrzod
Olmulzod(en) - bathhouse
Orshetzod(en) - Crematorium
Rafarzod(en) - Kitchen
Sebïrzod(en) - Tannery
Vucarzod(en) - Columbarium
Âlzod(en) - Gym (just in case such a thing ever appears lol)
Åmzod(en) - Nursery
Ódadzod(en) - Tavern
I imagine Dwarves would not use the word house the same way we do given they mostly live in connected underground rooms inside fortresses. So a house would just be a collection of rooms that are part of a whole or a room that is independent. All the rooms of a tavern would be part of one house for example. A room designated for workshops would be a house. A "room" would be a room that is part of a bigger whole (i.e. the individual rooms inside a tavern). Many of the words in the list could have -mosus at the end of them instead of -zod depending on the place's layout, for the reason I just said