The word 'anchor' has been in English since the Old English period, appearing as 'ancor' in texts from before 900 CE. It derives from Latin 'ancora' (an anchor), borrowed from Greek 'ankura' (an anchor, a hook). The Greek word traces to 'ankos' (a bend, a curve, a hollow), from PIE *h₂enk- (to bend). The anchor is, at its etymological core, 'the bent thing' — a curved metal device designed to grip the seabed through the mechanical advantage of its hooked shape.
The PIE root *h₂enk- (to bend) produced a significant family of English words. 'Angle' (a bend between two lines) derives from the same root through Latin 'angulus' (a corner, an angle). 'Ankle' (the joint where the leg bends) traces to Old English 'ancleow,' from Proto-Germanic *ankulaz, from the same PIE source. 'Angina' (a choking, a constriction — literally a 'bending' or narrowing of the blood vessels) comes
The silent 'h' in modern English 'anchor' is a historical accident. The original Latin spelling was 'ancora' (no 'h'), and Old English faithfully reproduced this as 'ancor.' In the sixteenth century, Renaissance scholars — engaged in a widespread effort to restore Latin and Greek etymologies in English spelling — inserted an 'h' by false analogy with Greek words containing the letter chi (χ), which was transliterated as 'ch.' They apparently associated 'ancor' with a Greek root containing chi, but the actual Greek 'ankura' contains kappa (κ), not chi. The spurious 'h' stuck, and five centuries later it remains, silently commemorating a learned error.
The anchor as a physical device is one of the oldest and most essential pieces of maritime technology. The earliest anchors were simply heavy stones, sometimes shaped or drilled for rope attachment. The transition to metal anchors with hooked arms (flukes) occurred in the ancient Mediterranean — the Greeks and Romans used iron anchors with a design recognizably similar to the traditional 'fisherman' anchor used into the nineteenth century. The basic principle has remained constant for over two thousand
The word 'anchor' has generated an exceptionally rich metaphorical vocabulary. An 'anchor' in news broadcasting is the principal presenter who 'anchors' the program — providing stability and continuity. An 'anchor store' in a shopping mall is the major retailer whose presence stabilizes the commercial environment. In psychology, 'anchoring' is a cognitive bias in which people rely disproportionately on the first piece of information they encounter (the 'anchor') when making decisions. In rock
The phrase 'to weigh anchor' (to raise the anchor in preparation for departure) preserves the archaic use of 'weigh' in the sense of 'to raise' or 'to heave' — related to 'way' as in 'under way.' 'To ride at anchor' means to be moored with the anchor deployed. 'To drop anchor' or 'to cast anchor' means to lower it. 'Anchorage' — both a general term for a sheltered place where ships can anchor and the name of Alaska's largest city — derives directly from 'anchor.'
In Christian iconography, the anchor became a symbol of hope — a metaphor drawn from the Epistle to the Hebrews (6:19): 'Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast.' Early Christians adopted the anchor as a disguised cross during periods of persecution, and it appears frequently in catacomb art. This symbolic tradition persists in naval chaplaincy, heraldry, and jewelry.
The anchor's journey from PIE *h₂enk- (to bend) through Greek 'ankura' (hook) to English 'anchor' (stabilizing device) traces a continuous thread of meaning across five thousand years. The concept is always the same: a curved shape that grips, holds, and prevents motion — whether it is a bent piece of iron on the seabed, a joint that bends in the leg, or a cognitive reference point that holds the mind in place.