The English verb "comply" traces its origins to the Latin verb "complēre," meaning "to fill up" or "to complete." This Latin term is itself a compound formed from the prefix "com-" meaning "together" or "with," and the root "plēre," meaning "to fill." The root "plēre" is derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *pleh₁-, which carries the general sense of "to fill." Thus, the original Latin verb "complēre" conveyed the idea of filling something up completely or fulfilling a requirement.
From Latin, the concept of fulfilling or completing an obligation passed into the Romance languages, notably Italian and Spanish. In Italian, the verb "complire" and in Spanish, "cumplir," both mean "to fulfill an obligation," "to complete," or "to satisfy." These Romance forms are direct descendants of Latin "complēre," preserving the core semantic field of completion and fulfillment.
The English verb "comply" entered the language in the 17th century, adopting the sense of "to act in accordance with a wish, command, rule, or requirement," which aligns closely with the original Latin and Romance meanings of fulfilling or completing an obligation. However, the etymology of "comply" in English is complicated by a phenomenon of folk etymology that influenced its morphological and semantic development.
Specifically, English speakers associated the ending "-ply" in "comply" with a different Latin root, "plicāre," meaning "to fold." This root underlies a family of English verbs ending in "-ply," such as "apply," "supply," "imply," and "reply," all ultimately derived from Latin "plicāre." Because "comply" shares this "-ply" ending, English speakers analogically linked it to this "folding" family rather than to the "filling" root "plēre."
This association created a dual etymology in English. On one hand, "comply" retained its inherited meaning from Latin "complēre" of filling or completing a requirement. On the other hand, by analogy with the "plicāre" verbs, it acquired a secondary connotation of "folding oneself toward another's wishes," implying a sense of yielding or bending in deference. This dual influence is reflected in the 16th-century
Over time, the modern dominant sense of "comply" in English has come to consolidate these two lines of influence. To "comply" now primarily means "to act in accordance with a rule or demand," which can be understood both as "filling the requirement" (from Latin "complēre") and "bending oneself to it" (by analogy with "plicāre"). This semantic fusion reflects the complex etymological history of the word in English, where inherited Latin roots and folk etymological reinterpretation have combined to shape its current meaning.
In summary, "comply" is ultimately derived from Latin "complēre," "to fill up," through Italian "complire" or Spanish "cumplir," meaning "to fulfill an obligation." Its English form and meaning have been influenced by folk etymology associating it with the Latin "plicāre," "to fold," resulting in a nuanced semantic development. The word exemplifies how morphological resemblance to a different root can affect the interpretation and usage of a term in a borrowing language, leading to a layered etymology that blends inherited meaning with analogical extension.