The word 'abstract' entered English in the fourteenth century from Latin 'abstrahere' (past participle 'abstractus'), a compound of 'abs-' (away from, a variant of the prefix 'ab-') and 'trahere' (to draw, to pull). The core image — drawing something away from its material context — has generated a remarkably wide semantic range, from philosophy to art to academic publishing.
The philosophical sense came first and has been the word's intellectual backbone for seven centuries. In medieval scholastic philosophy, 'abstractio' was the mental process of separating the universal from the particular — drawing the idea of 'redness' away from any specific red object, or the concept of 'justice' away from any specific just act. This philosophical usage, developed by thinkers including Thomas Aquinas, established 'abstract' as the opposite of 'concrete' — a pairing that remains fundamental to Western thought.
The adjective 'abstract' in everyday English means 'existing in thought rather than in physical reality.' Abstract concepts — freedom, love, time, beauty — are those that cannot be touched or directly perceived. This philosophical sense has given English the colloquial complaint 'that's too abstract,' meaning too removed from practical, concrete reality. The word thus carries a built-in tension
The noun 'abstract' has two major senses. In academic and scientific writing, an 'abstract' is a brief summary placed at the beginning of a paper, drawing away the essential argument from the full text. This usage, dating from the seventeenth century, preserves the Latin original's meaning with unusual fidelity: the abstract is literally 'drawn away' from the whole, a concentrated essence separated from the body. In law, an 'abstract of title' is a condensed history
The artistic sense — 'abstract art,' art that does not attempt to represent external reality — is the most recent major development, emerging in the early twentieth century. Kandinsky, Mondrian, and Malevich pioneered 'abstraction' in painting, drawing away from representational content toward pure form, color, and composition. The term 'Abstract Expressionism,' applied to the postwar American movement of Pollock, de Kooning, and Rothko, became one of the defining labels in art history. In each case, the etymology is
The verb 'to abstract' retains the most physical sense: to remove or take away. One can abstract a document from a file, abstract money from an account, or abstract oneself from a situation. In chemistry, 'abstraction' refers to the removal of an atom or group from a molecule. These uses feel more archaic than the adjective and noun senses, but they preserve the word's original Latin meaning
The word's stress pattern follows the regular English noun-verb distinction: the noun and adjective stress the first syllable (/ˈæb.stɹækt/), while the verb stresses the second (/æbˈstɹækt/). This pattern is shared with 'contract,' 'extract,' and other '-tract' words, making it one of the most consistent stress-shift sets in English.
Within the 'trahere' family, 'abstract' stands at the philosophical end of the spectrum. Where 'attract' and 'extract' are primarily physical, and 'contract' bridges the physical and legal, 'abstract' has become predominantly intellectual — its connection to physical pulling almost invisible beneath centuries of philosophical usage.