Etymology

Commute

The word meant to exchange one thing for another, until daily fare tickets exchanged it for something else entirely.

Latin · 15th century (original), 1889 (travel sense)
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Latin
commutare
Middle English
commuten
English
commute

The Latin commutare meant to change altogether, from com- (together, intensively) and mutare (to change). When the word entered Middle English in the fifteenth century, it meant to transform or exchange one thing for another.1

By the 1630s, commute had acquired a legal meaning: to substitute a less severe punishment for a harsher one, exchanging a death sentence for imprisonment. The word still carried its original Latin sense of transformation through exchange.2

The connection to daily travel emerged from a financial transaction. In the 1820s, American ferry lines and railroads began selling "commutation tickets," discounted passes that allowed the holder to combine multiple daily fares into a single upfront payment. The earliest known use of "commuters" in this context appeared in a notice in The Long-Island Star on May 2, 1822, requesting that "commuters" not purchase their tickets until after a public meeting about ferry services.3

1822
The year the word 'commuters' first appeared in print, in a Brooklyn newspaper notice about ferry commutation tickets.

By the 1860s, commuter referred to anyone who held such a ticket. By 1889, commute had become a verb meaning to travel back and forth between home and work. The noun commute, describing the journey itself, is attested from 1960.4

The U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey reports that in 2022, the average one-way commute for American workers was 27.6 minutes. Approximately 76 percent of workers drove alone.5 A Latin word that meant total transformation now describes the daily repetition of the same journey, the most unchanging part of the working day.

15th century
Commute enters English from Latin commutare, meaning to transform or exchange.
1822
The word 'commuters' appears in a Brooklyn newspaper, referring to holders of discounted ferry commutation tickets.
1889
Commute takes on the meaning of traveling back and forth to work.
2022
The average one-way commute for American workers is 27.6 minutes.
1 Douglas Harper, "Commute," Online Etymology Dictionary (etymonline.com).
2 Harper, "Commute," Online Etymology Dictionary.
3 "Commuters," paid notice in The Long-Island Star, May 2, 1822, cited in Harper, "Commuter," Online Etymology Dictionary.
4 Harper, "Commute" and "Commuter," Online Etymology Dictionary.
5 U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, 2022 data.
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