## Coalition: Etymology and History
### Origin and Formation
The English word **coalition** entered the language in the early seventeenth century, first attested around 1612. It derives from French *coalition*, itself a borrowing from Medieval Latin *coalītiō* (genitive *coalītiōnis*), meaning 'a growing together' or 'union.' The Latin noun was built on the past participial stem of *coalēscere*, a verb meaning 'to grow together, unite, or fuse' (Lewis & Short, *A Latin Dictionary*, 1879).
The verb *coalēscere* is transparently composed of two elements: the prefix *co-* (an assimilated form of *com-*, meaning 'together,' from PIE *\*ḱom*) and *alēscere* (to grow up, be nourished). The latter is the inchoative form of *alere* (to nourish, sustain, rear), one of the most productive Latin roots in the English lexicon.
### The PIE Root *h₂el-
At the deepest recoverable level, *alere* descends from the Proto-Indo-European root **\*h₂el-**, meaning 'to grow' or 'to nourish.' This root is reconstructed with confidence by comparative linguists (Watkins, *The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots*, 3rd ed., 2011).
The Latin reflex *alere* generated an extraordinarily wide family. Among the derivatives that passed into English are *adolescent* (from *adolēscere*, 'to grow up'), *adult* (from *adultus*), *alumnus* (literally 'nursling'), *aliment* and *alimentary* (from *alimentum*), and *coalition* itself. More surprisingly, *proletariat* belongs here: Latin *prōlētārius* designated those who served the state with *prōlēs* (offspring), a compound of *pro-* and the root of *alere* (De Vaan, *Etymological Dictionary of Latin*, 2008).
On the Germanic side, the same PIE root produced Proto-Germanic *\*aldaz* ('grown, old'), which yields English **old**, German *alt*, and the second element of **world** (OE *weorold* from PGmc *\*weraldiz*, 'age of man').
### Semantic Development
The semantic history of *coalition* divides into two phases. In its earliest English uses, the word retained the concrete Latin sense of physical growing-together or fusion. Robert Boyle and other natural philosophers employed *coalition* to describe the merging of particles or fusing of metals. The OED records this physical sense as primary in the 17th century.
The political sense — a temporary alliance of parties or factions — emerged in the early 18th century. By the 1710s, British political writers had adopted the term for parliamentary alliances, a usage that rapidly became dominant. The metaphor is botanical at its core: factions 'grow together' to form a single body, but the union is understood to be temporary.
### Coalition in British Political History
The concept of a **coalition government** has been central to British politics since the 18th century. Notable coalitions include the Fox–North Coalition of 1783, the wartime coalitions under Lloyd George (1916–1922) and Churchill (1940–1945), and the Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition (2010–2015). In international relations, the word has been applied to military alliances since the Napoleonic Wars, when successive 'coalitions' of European powers formed against France.
### Coalesce: A Parallel Borrowing
The related verb **coalesce** entered English separately around the 1540s, borrowed directly from Latin *coalēscere*. While *coalition* is the nominal, political word, *coalesce* retains a broader semantic range, describing any process of merging or fusing. The two words share identical Latin parentage but followed distinct paths into English.
Coalition belongs to a cluster of English words describing combination: *alliance* (from *alligāre*, to bind), *confederation* (from *foedus*, treaty), *consortium* (from *consors*, sharing fate), *union* (from *ūnus*, one). What distinguishes *coalition* is its organic metaphor: not binding or swearing, but *growing together*.
### References
- De Vaan, M. (2008). *Etymological Dictionary of Latin*. Brill. - Lewis, C.T. & Short, C. (1879). *A Latin Dictionary*. Clarendon Press. - OED, s.v. 'coalition,' 'coalesce.' - Watkins, C. (2011). *American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots*, 3rd ed.