Etymology

Negotium

The Roman word for business meant not-leisure. Work was defined by what it lacked.

Latin · 2nd century BC
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Latin
nec (not) + ōtium (leisure)
negotium (business)

In Latin, negotium is a compound of nec, meaning not, and ōtium, meaning leisure.1 The word for business, work, and public affairs was literally "not-leisure." The Romans defined productive activity by its opposite, as the absence of the thing they valued more.

Otium first appeared in Latin literature around 190 BC, in a chorus from Ennius's Iphigenia, where soldiers contrasted their idleness on campaign with the business (negotium) of civilian life.2

For the Roman elite, otium was not laziness. It was time devoted to philosophy, writing, reading, contemplation, friendship, and the cultivation of the mind. Cicero defended the value of his own otium by pointing to the philosophical works he produced during periods of political inactivity.3 Seneca argued that the truly valuable life required extended periods of withdrawal from public business.

The linguistic structure encoded a hierarchy. Leisure was the named condition. Work was what happened when leisure was absent.

The Greek equivalent was askholía (ἀσχολία), meaning lack of leisure, from the same structural logic: a- (not) plus skholē (leisure). The Greek word skholē, meaning leisure, also gave English the word "school," reflecting the ancient assumption that education required freedom from labor.4

English inherited the Latin root through negotiate, negotiation, and negotiable, all carrying the sense of conducting business. The original opposition between otium and negotium is no longer visible in these words. The leisure that once defined the default condition has disappeared from the vocabulary of work.5

c. 190 BC
Ennius uses otium and negotium in contrast in a chorus from Iphigenia, the earliest known Latin usage.
1st century BC
Cicero and Seneca develop the philosophical distinction between otium (contemplative leisure) and negotium (public business).
1 Michiel de Vaan, Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden: Brill, 2008), entry for ōtium.
2 Carl Deroux, Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History, on the first appearance of otium in Ennius.
3 Cicero, various letters and philosophical works; see Julia Bondanella on otium in Roman culture.
4 Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1879), entry for negotium.
5 Lewis and Short, A Latin Dictionary, entry for negotium.
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