The word 'buoy' entered Middle English around 1300 as 'boie,' and its etymology has been debated for centuries. Two main derivations compete. The first traces it to Old French 'buie' (a chain, a fetter), from Latin 'boia' (a leather collar, a chain for prisoners), from Greek 'boeiai' (ox-hide straps) — under this analysis, a buoy is named for the chain that anchors it to the seabed. The second traces it to Middle Dutch 'boeie' (a shackle, and later a buoy), possibly from Frankish *baukn (a sign, a beacon), related to Proto-Germanic *bauknaz (a signal, a beacon) — under this analysis, a buoy is named for its function as a floating signal.
Both etymologies are plausible, and the truth may involve a convergence of both sources: the buoy is both a beacon (it signals) and a chained device (it is fettered to the seabed). The Dutch maritime connection is particularly strong, since the Netherlands was the leading maritime power in the later medieval period and the earliest sophisticated buoyage systems were developed in Dutch and Flemish waters.
The pronunciation of 'buoy' is one of the most famous transatlantic splits in English. In British English, it is pronounced as one syllable: /bɔɪ/, rhyming with 'boy.' In American English, it is pronounced as two syllables: /ˈbuːi/, rhyming with 'gooey.' The American pronunciation preserves a closer approximation of the original French or Dutch vowel, while the British pronunciation has converged with the unrelated word 'boy.' Neither pronunciation is more 'correct' than the other; they simply represent different historical paths of vowel development.
The derivative 'buoyancy' (the property of floating or the upward force exerted by a fluid on an immersed body) was coined in the late sixteenth century from 'buoy' + '-ancy.' 'Buoyant' (tending to float; cheerful and optimistic) followed. The metaphorical extension from floating to cheerfulness is natural and vivid: a 'buoyant' mood is one that stays afloat despite downward pressures, just as a buoy stays on the surface despite the current and the anchor chain pulling it down.
Buoys serve several essential maritime functions. Channel buoys mark the edges of navigable channels, indicating where the water is deep enough for safe passage. Lateral buoys (red and green in the IALA system) indicate which side of the channel to pass on. Cardinal buoys indicate the direction of the deepest water relative to a hazard. Mooring buoys provide attachment points
The life buoy — a ring-shaped flotation device thrown to a person in the water — combines the buoy's two essential qualities: it floats and it saves. The 'ring buoy' or 'life ring' is one of the most recognized pieces of safety equipment in maritime culture, its distinctive red-and-white or orange coloring universally associated with rescue at sea.
The verb 'to buoy' means to keep afloat, to mark with buoys, or (figuratively) to sustain or encourage. 'Buoyed by good news' means lifted and sustained, as if floating on a supporting fluid. The phrase captures the essential physics of buoyancy — the upward force that counteracts gravity — and applies it to the human experience of being supported through difficulty.
The word 'buoy' thus occupies a unique position at the intersection of physics, navigation, and metaphor. It names a device that simultaneously signals and stabilizes — marking a position in the water while being held in place by its anchor chain. Its disputed etymology, combining the concepts of fettering and signaling, mirrors the dual function of the object itself. And its derivative 'buoyancy' has become one of the most widely used scientific terms in the English language, applying