Etymology

Office

The Latin root meant "work-doing," and for centuries the word referred to a duty, not a room.

Latin · 13th century
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Latin
opificium
Latin
officium
Old French
ofice
Middle English
office

The word office entered English around 1250 from the Old French ofice, meaning a duty or a religious service. The Old French derived from the Latin officium, itself a contraction of opificium, which meant "work-doing," combining opus (work) and facere (to make or do).1

For its first three centuries in English, office had nothing to do with a physical space. It meant a position of authority, a ceremonial function, or a religious observance. A person held an office. The word described responsibility, not real estate.2

The spatial meaning appeared gradually. In 1560, Cosimo I de' Medici commissioned a building in Florence to house the administrative and legal functions of the Tuscan government. The Italians called it the Uffizi, their word for offices.3 English usage followed a similar path. By the seventeenth century, "office" could refer to the room where official duties were carried out.

The compound "office hours" appeared in English by 1841. "Office furniture" was attested by 1839. "Office party" did not arrive until 1950.4

1560
The year Cosimo I de' Medici commissioned the Uffizi in Florence to house government offices

The transition from duty to room accelerated during the nineteenth century, when industrial-era corporations needed centralized locations for clerical staff. The open office and the org chart emerged to manage these growing concentrations of administrative workers.

In American English, "office" expanded further. A doctor's office, a dentist's office, a lawyer's office. British English retained more specific terms, preferring "surgery" for a doctor's practice. The American usage reflects the word's long drift from sacred duty to commercial space, from opificium to cubicle.5

13th century
The word entered English from Old French, meaning a position of authority or a religious duty.
1560
Cosimo I de' Medici commissioned the Uffizi in Florence to house government administrative functions.
1839
The compound "office furniture" appeared in English, marking the spatial meaning's growing dominance.
1950
"Office party" entered English usage, attested by mid-century.
1 Douglas Harper, "Office," Online Etymology Dictionary, accessed March 2026.
2 "Office," Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, accessed March 2026.
3 Leon Satkowski, Giorgio Vasari: Architect and Courtier (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993), 76-80.
4 Douglas Harper, "Office," Online Etymology Dictionary, accessed March 2026. Attestation dates for compound forms.
5 "Office," in Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press).
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