The English term "aboriginal" derives from the Latin noun "aborigines," which was used by the Romans to designate the original inhabitants of Latium, the region surrounding Rome, before the arrival of the historical Roman people. The Latin "aborigines" is traditionally analyzed as a compound formed from the preposition "ab," meaning "from" or "away from," and the noun "origo," meaning "origin," "source," or "beginning." The latter itself stems from the verb "oriri," which means "to rise," "to be born," or "to emerge." This verb traces back to the Proto-Indo-European root *h₃er-, which carries the general sense of "to rise" or "to move," reflecting the metaphorical notion of birth or emergence.
The earliest attestations of "aborigines" in Latin literature date to the early Roman period, with authors such as Cato the Elder (234–149 BCE) treating the term as a proper ethnonym rather than a purely descriptive phrase. In this context, "Aborigines" referred specifically to a legendary people believed to have inhabited Latium from the earliest times, prior to the arrival of other Italic tribes. While the etymology "ab origine" ("from the beginning") is a plausible folk etymology that aligns with the semantic content of the term, it is uncertain whether the Romans themselves consciously formed the name by combining "ab" and "origo," or whether the term had an older, possibly pre-Latin origin that was later reinterpreted through this Latin morphological analysis.
The Latin noun "origo" is well attested in classical sources, where it denotes "origin," "source," or "beginning," and is related to the verb "oriri." The verb "oriri" belongs to a class of Latin deponent verbs that express natural processes of arising or being born. The root *h₃er- in Proto-Indo-European is reconstructed based on comparative evidence from various Indo-European languages, including Latin "oriri," Sanskrit "ṛ," and Greek "horizō," all connected to notions of rising or boundary-setting. This root underpins a semantic field centered
The English adjective "aboriginal" emerged in the mid-17th century, around the 1660s, formed by adding the suffix "-al" to the Latin stem "aborigine-." The suffix "-al" is a common adjectival ending in English, borrowed from Latin, used to form adjectives meaning "pertaining to" or "relating to." Thus, "aboriginal" literally means "pertaining to the aborigines" or "relating to the original inhabitants." The term was adopted into English with the meaning "inhabiting or existing in a land from the earliest times," and as a noun, it came to denote an original inhabitant of a place.
It is important to distinguish the inherited Latin components of "aborigines" from any later borrowings or reinterpretations. The elements "ab" and "origo" are inherited Latin words with clear Indo-European roots, while "aborigines" as a whole is a Latin ethnonym with a specific cultural and historical context. The English "aboriginal" is a direct borrowing from Latin, not an inherited English word, and its semantic development reflects the influence of classical scholarship and colonial discourse, where the term was applied to indigenous peoples in various parts of the world.
In summary, "aboriginal" ultimately derives from the Latin "aborigines," a term used by the Romans to refer to the earliest inhabitants of Latium. The Latin word is traditionally analyzed as a compound of "ab" ("from") and "origo" ("origin"), itself derived from the verb "oriri" ("to rise, to be born"), which traces back to the Proto-Indo-European root *h₃er-. The English adjective "aboriginal" was formed in the 1660s by adding the suffix "-al" to the Latin stem, carrying the meaning of something or someone existing from the earliest times in a particular land. While the etymology "ab origine" is widely accepted, some uncertainty remains regarding whether this was the original intent of the Latin term or a