Collateral means side by side, from Latin com- (together) and latus (side). Medieval Latin collateralis described anything that runs alongside or in parallel. The word entered English in the 14th century, initially in the spatial sense of adjacent or accompanying. The financial meaning — assets pledged to secure a debt — developed because the pledged property accompanies the loan as a parallel guarantee, running alongside the primary obligation.
The logic is precise. A bank lends money (the primary transaction). The borrower pledges a house, car, or other asset that stands beside the loan as security. If the borrower defaults, the lender seizes the collateral to recover the debt. The asset does not replace the loan — it runs parallel to it, which is exactly what the Latin etymology describes.
Latin latus (side) generated lateral (of or pertaining to the side), bilateral (two-sided), unilateral (one-sided), multilateral (many-sided), and equilateral (equal-sided). The mathematical and diplomatic families of words both derive from the same body part — the flank or side of a person or thing.
Collateral damage entered military vocabulary in the mid-20th century, initially as a clinical euphemism for unintended destruction accompanying a military strike. The phrase uses collateral in its original spatial sense: damage that occurs beside the target, alongside but not at the intended point of impact. The term has been widely criticized for sanitizing civilian casualties through abstract language.
In genealogy, collateral relatives are those connected through a shared ancestor but not in a direct line of descent. Your sibling is a collateral relative; your child is a direct one. This usage predates the financial sense and preserves the word's core meaning most transparently — collateral relatives are those who stand beside your bloodline rather than in it.