The smartphone in your pocket owes its name to medieval heraldry. Device entered English from Old French devis, which meant a plan, a design, or a heraldic emblem — all descended from Latin dīvidere (to divide). The conceptual link between dividing and devising runs through problem-solving: to devise a solution is to break a challenge into manageable parts and arrange them into a working plan. Old French preserved this planning sense while adding the heraldic one — a noble's device was the emblem on their shield, the visual design that identified them. Middle English borrowed both meanings in the thirteenth century. Over the following centuries, device migrated from abstract plans to concrete objects. By the sixteenth century, a device could be a mechanical contrivance. By the twentieth, it meant any gadget or apparatus. The phrase 'left to one's own devices' is a fossil of the older meaning — left to one's own plans and inclinations, not left with one's own gadgets. The verb devise followed a separate but parallel path, retaining the sense of planning and inventing. French devise took yet another turn, becoming the standard word for currency and national motto.