The word 'disruption' entered English in the 1620s from Latin 'disruptiōnem,' the accusative of 'disruptiō' (a breaking apart, a bursting asunder), the noun of action from 'disrumpere' or 'dirumpere' (to break apart, to shatter), a compound of 'dis-' (apart, in pieces) + 'rumpere' (to break, to burst, to tear). The PIE root behind 'rumpere' is *Hrewp- (to snatch, to tear, to break), which also produced Germanic *raubōną (to rob, to plunder), giving English 'rob' (via French 'rober,' from Frankish), 'reave' (to plunder, now archaic but preserved in 'bereave'), and German 'rauben' (to rob).
The Latin verb 'rumpere' generated one of the most productive word families in English. 'Rupture' (a breaking), 'erupt' (to break out), 'interrupt' (to break between), 'corrupt' (thoroughly broken, hence morally ruined), 'abrupt' (broken off, hence sudden), and 'bankrupt' (from Italian 'banca rotta,' broken bench — the practice of breaking a moneylender's table when he failed) all derive from 'rumpere.' The suffix '-rupt' is one of the most recognizable Latin elements in English vocabulary.
For most of its history, 'disruption' was a straightforwardly negative word: it meant violent disturbance, forcible separation, or the breaking apart of something that should remain whole. The 'Disruption' (capitalized) in Scottish church history refers to the split of 1843, when over 450 ministers left the Church of Scotland to form the Free Church — an event treated as a trauma, not a triumph.
The word's transformation into a term of praise is attributable to a single scholar: Clayton M. Christensen, a Harvard Business School professor who introduced the concept of 'disruptive innovation' in a 1995 Harvard Business Review article and his 1997 book 'The Innovator's Dilemma.' Christensen defined disruptive innovation as a process by which a smaller company with fewer resources successfully challenges established incumbent businesses. The theory distinguished 'disruptive' innovation (which
Christensen's framework transformed 'disruption' from a word of damage into a word of aspiration. By the 2010s, 'disrupt' and 'disruption' had become the most overused terms in Silicon Valley and startup culture, applied to everything from ride-sharing to mattress delivery. Christensen himself objected to the dilution of his technical term, writing in 2015 that many phenomena labeled 'disruptive' did not meet his theory's criteria. The semantic inflation of 'disruption' — from violent breaking to any kind of market change — represents a case study in how