The word 'allergy' names the immune system's exaggerated response to substances that are normally harmless, such as pollen, dust mites, pet dander, or certain foods. Unlike most medical terms, which evolved over centuries, 'allergy' was deliberately coined at a specific moment by a specific person.
In 1906, the Austrian pediatrician Clemens von Pirquet (1874–1929) published a paper introducing the term 'Allergie' in the Münchener Medizinische Wochenschrift (Munich Medical Weekly). He constructed it from two Greek elements: 'allos' (ἄλλος), meaning 'other' or 'different,' and 'ergon' (ἔργον), meaning 'work' or 'reaction.' The compound literally means 'other-working' or 'altered reactivity.'
Von Pirquet's concept was broader than the modern definition. He was studying vaccination reactions and serum sickness — the body's response when re-exposed to a foreign protein — and he needed a neutral term for the immune system's altered state after initial exposure, regardless of whether the subsequent reaction was harmful (hypersensitivity) or beneficial (immunity). In von Pirquet's original formulation, both immunity and allergy were forms of altered reactivity. Over time, 'allergy' narrowed to mean specifically the harmful, overactive response.
Greek 'allos' (other, different) comes from PIE *h₂élyos (other), which through Germanic produced English 'else' (originally meaning 'otherwise, in another way'). Latin 'alius' (other) is a direct cognate, giving English 'alias,' 'alibi' (elsewhere), and 'alien.' The Greek prefix 'allo-' appears in 'allopathy' (treatment by opposites, contrasted with homeopathy), 'allotropy' (different forms of the same element), and 'allophone' (a variant pronunciation of a phoneme).
Greek 'ergon' (work) comes from PIE *werǵ- (to work), the same root behind 'energy' (en-ergeia, 'activity, being at work'), 'synergy' (working together), 'organ' (an instrument, a working tool), 'surgery' (hand-work), and English 'work' itself through the Germanic branch.
The derivative 'allergen' (a substance that causes an allergic reaction) was formed by analogy with 'antigen' — the '-gen' suffix meaning 'producing.' 'Allergic' (pertaining to or suffering from allergy) appeared shortly after the word itself. 'Allergist' (a physician specializing in allergies) followed in the 1920s.
The rapid global adoption of 'allergy' — it spread from German into English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Japanese, and virtually every major language within two decades — reflects both the universality of the condition it describes and the effectiveness of von Pirquet's Greek-based coinage. Medical terminology built from Greek and Latin roots is instantly recognizable across European languages, functioning as a shared scientific vocabulary.