The English verb 'brandish' is a word forged, quite literally, in fire and steel. Its etymology traces a path from the Proto-Germanic word for burning through Frankish swords to French chivalric literature and finally into English, carrying with it the vivid image of a blade flashing like flame.
The word enters Middle English in the early fourteenth century from Old French 'brandir' (to flourish or wave a sword), specifically from the lengthened stem 'brandiss-' that appeared in certain conjugated forms. The Old French verb derives from the noun 'brand,' meaning 'a sword' or 'blade,' which French had borrowed from Frankish — the Germanic language spoken by the Franks who conquered Gaul in the fifth century.
Frankish *brand comes from Proto-Germanic *brandaz, meaning 'fire,' 'burning,' or 'a firebrand' (a piece of burning wood). The deeper root is PIE *bʰrenu- (to burn). The semantic connection between fire and swords is not arbitrary: a sword blade, when swung through the air, catches and reflects light in a way that resembles a tongue of flame. The Germanic warriors who named their swords 'brands
The English word 'brand' in its commercial sense — a trademark, an identity — descends from the same source through a different metaphorical pathway. Livestock owners burned identifying marks into their animals' hides using heated irons, a practice called 'branding.' The mark itself was the 'brand.' By the nineteenth century, manufacturers were figuratively 'branding' their products with distinctive names and logos, and by the twentieth century, 'brand' had become central to marketing vocabulary
Brandy, the distilled spirit, also belongs to this family. The word comes from Dutch 'brandewijn' (burnt wine), referring to the distillation process in which wine is heated — 'burned' — to produce the concentrated spirit. The Dutch word was shortened to 'brandy' in English by the seventeenth century.
Returning to 'brandish' specifically: the word entered English through the channel of French chivalric romance, the literary genre that dominated European aristocratic culture in the twelfth through fourteenth centuries. In these texts, knights constantly 'brandished' their swords — flourishing them before combat, raising them in triumph, or wielding them in defense of honor. The word carried connotations of martial display, of making one's weapon visible as both threat and spectacle.
In modern English, 'brandish' has expanded beyond swords to cover the threatening or ostentatious display of any object. One can brandish a knife, a gun, a fist, a document, or even an argument. The essential meaning remains the visual display of power — making something visible and menacing, holding it up so that others must see it and respond. This is the exact image that the Proto-Germanic speakers
Legally, 'brandishing a weapon' is a specific criminal offense in many jurisdictions, distinct from mere possession. The law recognizes what the etymology implies: brandishing is not just holding a weapon but displaying it in a way calculated to intimidate. The word's ancient connection to martial display makes it precisely suited for this legal meaning.