The English word "category" traces its origins to the Late Latin term "catēgoria," which itself is derived from the Greek "katēgoria." In classical Greek, "katēgoria" bore meanings related to accusation, assertion, or predication. The semantic trajectory of the term from notions of public accusation to systematic classification is closely tied to its philosophical usage, particularly in the works of Aristotle.
Etymologically, "katēgoria" in Greek is a compound formed from the prefix "kata-" and the verb "agoreuein." The prefix "kata-" generally conveys a sense of "down upon" or "against," functioning as an intensifier or directional element in various Greek compounds. The verb "agoreuein" means "to speak in the assembly," deriving from "agora," which denotes the assembly or marketplace—a central public space in ancient Greek city-states where citizens gathered for discourse and decision-making.
The root "agora" itself is a fundamental term in Greek, signifying a place of gathering, both commercial and political. From "agora" comes "agoreuein," literally "to speak in the agora," which extended metaphorically to public speaking or making a formal statement. The combination "katēgorein" (from "kata-" + "agoreuein") originally meant "to speak against" or "to accuse," reflecting the legal and rhetorical practices of public accusation in the assembly.
Over time, "katēgoria" evolved from its initial legal and rhetorical sense of an accusation or charge to a broader philosophical concept. Aristotle, writing in the 4th century BCE, employed "katēgoriai" as a technical term to denote the fundamental classes or categories of being. In his "Categories," Aristotle sought to identify the most general ways in which a subject can be described or predicated. Here, "katēgoriai" referred to essential modes of predication—such as substance
This philosophical usage marked a significant semantic shift from the original sense of public accusation to a conceptual framework for classification and description. The term's passage into Latin as "catēgoria" preserved this philosophical meaning, which was transmitted through medieval scholasticism and Renaissance humanism.
The English adoption of "category" occurred in the late 16th century, around the 1580s, directly from the Latin or via French influence. By this time, the term had fully acquired its modern sense of a class or division within a system of classification, reflecting Aristotle's conceptual legacy rather than the original legal connotations. The English "category" thus entered the language as a technical term in philosophy and logic before broadening to general usage denoting any grouping of people or things sharing particular characteristics.
It is important to distinguish this inherited lineage from any later borrowings or semantic shifts. The English "category" is not a borrowing from modern Greek but a direct continuation of the classical and medieval Latin term, itself a learned borrowing from ancient Greek. The roots "kata-," "agoreuein," and "agora" are all inherited Greek morphemes, not later additions.
In summary, "category" originates from the Greek "katēgoria," a compound of "kata-" (down upon, against) and "agoreuein" (to speak in the assembly), with "agora" meaning assembly or marketplace. Initially signifying a public accusation or assertion, the term was philosophically redefined by Aristotle as denoting the fundamental classes of being or modes of predication. This conceptual framework was transmitted through Late Latin "catēgoria" into English by the late 16th century, where it came to mean a class or division characterized by shared attributes within a system of classification. The word