The English word 'amendment' entered the language around 1230 from Old French 'amendement' (correction, improvement, betterment), derived from the verb 'amender' (to correct, to improve, to make better). The Old French verb comes from Latin 'ēmendāre' (to free from fault, to correct, to improve), composed of 'ex-' (out of, away from) and 'mendum' or 'menda' (fault, error, physical defect, blemish). The shift from Latin 'e-' to French 'a-' occurred through reinterpretation of the prefix, possibly influenced by the Latin prefix 'ad-' (toward).
The Latin root 'mendum' (fault, defect) has a family of English descendants. 'Emend' (to correct a text by removing errors) preserves the original Latin prefix 'ex-' and retains the scholarly sense of textual correction. 'Amend' (to correct, to improve behavior or laws) is the more common form that passed through French. 'Mend' (to repair something broken) is the shortest form, having lost its prefix entirely and narrowed to physical repair. 'Amends' (in 'make amends') means reparation or compensation for a wrong. 'Mendacious' (lying, untruthful) may also be related — from Latin 'mendāx' (lying), possibly connected to 'mendum' through the
The constitutional sense of 'amendment' — a formal revision to a constitution or fundamental law — is one of the most politically consequential meanings any English word has acquired. The United States Constitution, ratified in 1788, has been amended twenty-seven times. The first ten amendments, ratified in 1791, are known collectively as the Bill of Rights. The process of amendment was built into the Constitution by its framers, who recognized that even a foundational document contains 'faults' (menda) that future
The most transformative American amendments illustrate the range of 'faults' that amendment can address. The Thirteenth Amendment (1865) abolished slavery — correcting what many considered the original document's most fundamental defect. The Fourteenth Amendment (1868) guaranteed equal protection under the law. The Fifteenth (1870) prohibited racial discrimination in voting. The Nineteenth (1920) extended voting rights to women. Each amendment acknowledged that the existing law contained a fault and proposed its correction. The vocabulary of amendment — rooted
In parliamentary procedure, amendments serve a different but related function. A proposed amendment to a bill modifies its text before final passage — adding provisions, removing clauses, or changing wording. The process of amendment is central to legislative practice: most bills are significantly changed through amendments before they become law. The phrase 'friendly amendment' (an amendment supported by the bill's sponsor) and 'hostile amendment' (one designed to weaken or defeat the bill) reveal the political dynamics that the neutral-sounding word conceals.
The distinction between 'amend' and 'emend' is worth noting. In modern usage, 'emend' is restricted to textual criticism — correcting errors in manuscripts and published texts. 'Amend' is used for everything else: laws, behavior, documents, plans. The two words were originally the same, and their differentiation illustrates how English often develops specialized variants from a single source. A scholar emends a text; a legislature amends a law; a person amends their behavior; a gardener amends the
Other European languages handle the concept similarly. French 'amendement' is used both legislatively and constitutionally, as in English. Spanish 'enmienda' preserves the Latin prefix 'en-' (from 'ex-'). German borrows 'Amendement' from French for legislative amendments but uses the native 'Änderung' (change) for constitutional amendments. The variety of terms across languages reflects different legal traditions, but the underlying concept — that laws can and should be corrected — is universal in democratic governance.
The phrase 'to make amends' uses the same root in a personal rather than legal context. To make amends is to correct a fault in one's behavior — to repair a relationship damaged by wrongdoing. The phrase preserves the oldest sense of the Latin root: 'mendum' originally referred to physical defects and blemishes, and making amends is an attempt to remove the blemish that a wrong action has left on the relationship between two people.