AI Summary of Peer-Reviewed Research

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Etymology is split into pre-modern and scientific senses

An open book showing two facing pages with handwritten text and colorful illustrated panels featuring historical artwork and figures, photographed in landscape orientation.
Research area:LinguisticsLanguage and LinguisticsHistorical Linguistics and Language Studies

What the study found

The article argues that etymology has not had a history as long as linguistics itself, but is instead a scientific discipline with a much shorter history. It proposes a sharp distinction between scientific etymology and earlier pre-modern practices of explaining word origins.

Why the authors say this matters

The authors suggest that making this distinction helps correct the textbook claim that etymology has a long independent history. They conclude that earlier word-origin discussions should not be treated as part of the history of modern scientific etymology.

What the researchers tested

The article is a conceptual and historical argument based on definitions of etymology and examples drawn from texts and cultures from Antiquity to the 18th century. It contrasts modern scientific historical linguistics with earlier ways of discussing word origins.

What worked and what didn't

The paper argues against the claim that ancient Greek and Roman work counts as historical linguistics in the modern scientific sense. It proposes two labels: etymology 2 for scientific etymology, and etymology 1 for pre-modern precursors. The pre-modern form is described as having truth-seeking, non-uniqueness, and semantic bias.

What to keep in mind

The abstract presents an argument rather than an empirical test. It does not describe experimental data, and it does not provide limitations beyond the scope of the historical examples discussed.

Key points

  • The article argues that scientific etymology has a much shorter history than is often claimed.
  • It distinguishes between etymology 2, meaning scientific etymology, and etymology 1, meaning pre-modern precursors.
  • The authors say pre-modern etymology is marked by truth-seeking, non-uniqueness, and semantic bias.
  • Examples are drawn from texts and cultures from Antiquity to the 18th century.
  • The abstract presents a historical argument rather than an empirical study.

Disclosure

Research title:
Etymology is split into pre-modern and scientific senses
Publication date:
2026-04-02
OpenAlex record:
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