The term "analog" traces its origins to the ancient Greek word ἀνάλογος (análogos), meaning "proportionate" or "conformable." This Greek adjective is itself a compound formed from the prefix ἀνά (aná), signifying "upon," "up," or "according to," and the noun λόγος (lógos), which carries a range of meanings including "ratio," "word," "reason," or "account." The prefix ἀνά derives from the Proto-Indo-European root *h₂en-, which broadly conveys the sense of "on" or "upon." This root is also the source of the English preposition "on" and appears in Latin as the prefix an- in various compounds. The second element, λόγος, comes from the PIE root *leǵ-, meaning "to gather," "collect," or "speak." This root is foundational to numerous words across Indo-European languages, such as Latin legere ("to read," "choose"), English lecture, legal, and legend, all of which share the semantic field of selection, speech, or reasoned discourse.
In classical Greek usage, ἀναλογία (analogía) referred specifically to a strict numerical proportion, expressed in the form a:b :: c:d, a concept central to Greek mathematics and philosophy. This technical sense was well established by the Pythagoreans and Plato, who regarded proportion as a fundamental principle underlying harmony and order in the cosmos. Aristotle further extended the notion of ἀναλογία beyond mathematics to logical reasoning, where it denoted analogy as a form of inference based on parallel cases or proportional relationships between different domains. Thus, the term carried
The Greek ἀνάλογος passed into Latin as analogia, retaining its mathematical and rhetorical senses. From Latin, the word was borrowed into French as analogue, where it continued to denote proportionality or similarity. The term entered English usage in the early 19th century, initially maintaining its general sense of correspondence or similarity. The spelling "analogue" was
The modern technical meaning of "analog" emerged in the mid-20th century with the advent of electronic computing and signal processing. In this context, an analog device or system is one that represents data through continuously variable physical quantities—such as voltage, rotation, or pressure—that are directly analogous to the measured values. This contrasts with digital systems, which encode information discretely using numerical values. The adoption of "analog" in this technical sense effectively revived the ancient Greek mathematical notion of proportionality: analog computing operates by preserving proportional physical relationships, thereby performing
It is important to distinguish the inherited Greek root and its semantic development from later borrowings and technical innovations. The original Greek ἀνάλογος and its derivatives were never concerned with electronic or computational technology, which is a modern application of the concept of proportionality. The English term "analog" as used in electronics and computing is thus a borrowing from French and Latin, adapted to new scientific contexts in the 19th and 20th centuries. The American English spelling
In summary, "analog" derives from the Greek ἀνάλογος, a compound of ἀνά ("according to") and λόγος ("ratio," "reason"), originally denoting proportion or conformity. Its journey into English involved transmission through Latin and French, with a semantic shift from general proportionality and analogy to a specialized technical term in the 20th century. The modern use of "analog" in electronics and computing is a direct conceptual descendant of the ancient Greek mathematical idea of ratio and proportion, applied to the representation of information by continuous physical quantities.