Etymology

Work

Greek, Latin, French, and Russian all use the same root for work and suffering.

Old English · pre-7th century
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Proto-Indo-European
*werg- (to do, to work)
Proto-Germanic *werką
Old English
weorc
Middle English
werk
Modern English work

The English word "work" descends from the Old English weorc, meaning "something done, deed, action, proceeding, business, military fortification," from the Proto-Germanic *werką.1 The Proto-Indo-European root is *werg-, meaning "to do, to make." Cognates appear across the Indo-European family: Greek ergon ("work, deed"), Old Persian kāra ("people, army"), and Armenian gorc ("work").

In many European languages, the words for work carry embedded associations with suffering and compulsion. The French travail derives from the Latin tripalium, a three-staked instrument of torture.2 The Spanish trabajo shares the same root. The Russian rabota ("work") is related to rab ("slave").3 The Greek ponos ("toil") is the root of the English word "pain."

The Old English weorc was relatively neutral by comparison, describing any purposeful activity. The word could refer to a military fortification, a literary composition, or an act of labor. The moral valence came later. The ancient Greek distinction between ponos (painful toil) and ergon (purposeful activity) reflected a culture that honored contemplation over manual effort.4 The Hebrew Bible began with God's own melakha ("creative work") in Genesis, giving labor a divine precedent, followed by rest on the seventh day.5

The Japanese shigoto (仕事) combines the characters for "serve" and "thing," framing work as service. The German Arbeit once meant "hardship" or "suffering" in Old High German before it came to mean simply "labor." In Mandarin, gōngzuò (工作) combines "craft" and "make."6 Every language that names the activity reveals what its speakers once believed about it.

Pre-7th century
Old English weorc entered the language, meaning deed, action, or any purposeful activity.
12th century
French travail, from the Latin tripalium (instrument of torture), became the standard word for labor.
1 Douglas Harper, "Work," Online Etymology Dictionary.
2 Douglas Harper, "Travail," Online Etymology Dictionary.
3 Max Vasmer, Russisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch (Heidelberg: Carl Winter, 1953).
4 Hannah Arendt, The Human Condition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1958).
5 Genesis 2:2, Hebrew Bible.
6 Andrea Scarpetta, "The Meaning of Work Across Languages," OECD Forum, 2019.
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