The word 'climb' carries within it a silent letter and a surprising metaphor. It descends from Old English 'climban' (to climb, to ascend, to mount), from Proto-Germanic '*klimbanan' (to climb), which likely derives from the Proto-Indo-European root *glei- (to stick, to adhere, to smear). The connection between climbing and sticking is not immediately obvious until you imagine the act of climbing as our ancestors knew it — not walking up stairs but clinging to rock faces, gripping tree bark, adhering to surfaces with hands and feet. To climb was to stick to what you were ascending.
The PIE root *glei- has produced a rich family of 'sticky' words across the Indo-European languages. 'Clay' (the sticky earth) comes from Old English 'claeg,' from the same root. 'Glue' entered English from Old French but ultimately traces to Latin 'gluten' (glue), from the same PIE source — and 'gluten' itself has become a modern household word through its role in bread-making and dietary concerns. 'Clamber,' a close synonym of 'climb' with an added frequentative sense (repeated or effortful climbing), likely connects to the same family through the concept of clinging
The silent 'b' in 'climb' is one of English's most familiar orthographic fossils. In Old English, the word was pronounced 'KLIM-ban,' with a clearly articulated 'b.' The final consonant cluster '-mb' was gradually simplified in speech during the late medieval period — speakers stopped pronouncing the 'b' after the nasal 'm,' finding the combination cumbersome (and 'cumbersome' has the same silent 'b' situation in 'dumb,' 'lamb,' 'thumb,' 'bomb,' 'comb,' 'womb,' 'tomb,' 'limb,' and 'numb'). The spelling, however, was already fixed by the time pronunciation changed, preserving the 'b' as a fossil of the older
The word 'climb' also illustrates an important principle of semantic narrowing. In Old English, 'climban' could mean any kind of upward movement, including walking up a gentle slope. Over the centuries, the word narrowed to imply effort and steepness — you climb a mountain, a ladder, a tree, but you walk up a hill. The sense of physical exertion and vertical ambition became central to the word, differentiating it from simpler words for upward movement like 'ascend' (from Latin
Metaphorical climbing entered English naturally from the physical sense. Social climbing — ascending the hierarchy of status and power — has been a concept in English since at least the 16th century. The phrase implies effort, ambition, and a degree of precariousness: the social climber, like the physical one, may fall. Career climbing, political climbing, climbing the corporate ladder — all extend the metaphor of vertical ascent requiring sustained physical (or social) effort. The underlying assumption is that society, like a cliff face, is vertical, and that upward movement
In the history of mountaineering, the word 'climb' underwent a further specialization. Technical climbing — ascending rock, ice, or mixed terrain using specialized equipment and techniques — made 'climb' the central verb of an entire subculture. 'Free climbing,' 'aid climbing,' 'ice climbing,' 'sport climbing,' 'bouldering' — the vocabulary of mountaineering revolves around the word that the Anglo-Saxons used for clinging to surfaces. The first ascent of Everest in 1953, the free solo ascent of El Capitan by Alex Honnold in 2017 — these achievements are described with the same Old English verb, its silent 'b' intact, its etymological connection to sticking and clinging more literally true on a cliff face than in any metaphorical usage.
The word 'climb' thus embodies a satisfying coherence between its etymology and its application. From PIE *glei- (to stick) through Germanic '*klimbanan' (to cling one's way upward) to modern English 'climb' (to ascend by effort), the core concept has held: climbing is adhesion in motion, the art of sticking to surfaces while moving upward. The silent 'b' is the only thing about the word that does not cling.