The word 'dominate' traces a direct line from the most intimate unit of social organization — the household — to the broadest concepts of power and control. Latin 'dominari' meant 'to be lord, to rule,' from 'dominus' (master, lord), which was itself derived from 'domus' (house, home), from PIE *dom- (house, household). The entire concept of domination is, at its etymological root, an extension of household authority to the wider world.
The 'dominus' in Roman society was the master of the 'domus' — the patriarch who exercised legal authority over his household, including his wife, children, slaves, and property. Roman law codified the 'patria potestas' (power of the father) as an almost absolute authority within the domestic sphere. When 'dominari' extended beyond the household to describe political or military supremacy, it carried this domestic model of power with it.
The word entered English in 1611, relatively late compared to many Latin borrowings. By this time, the word's meaning had fully generalized: to dominate was to exercise commanding influence or control in any sphere, not specifically in a household.
The word family built on 'dominus' and 'domus' is one of the largest and most socially significant in English. 'Dominion' (sovereign authority, a territory under control) came through Old French from Latin 'dominium.' 'Domain' (an area of authority or activity) followed the same path. 'Dominant' (exercising chief influence
Two of the most surprising members of this family are 'danger' and 'dungeon.' Old French 'dangier' originally meant 'the power of a lord' or 'dominion,' from Vulgar Latin *dominiarium (power of a lord). To be 'in danger' originally meant to be under someone's authority — specifically, to be at the mercy of a lord. The shift from 'under authority' to 'at risk' reflects the lived
'Dome' is another member, entering English from French and Italian, where it derives from Latin 'domus.' In Italian, 'duomo' means 'cathedral' — the house of God. The architectural feature (a hemispherical roof) got its name from the great domes that crowned Italian cathedrals. So when we see a dome, we are etymologically seeing a
The PIE root *dom- also produced 'domestic' (of the household) and 'domesticate' (to bring into the household). In the Germanic branch, the same root gave Proto-Germanic *timrą (building, building material), which became English 'timber' and German 'Zimmer' (room). The ancient meaning of 'building' or 'house' is preserved in these Germanic words.
The concept of domination — power modeled on the household lord — has been central to political theory from antiquity to the present. The Roman 'Dominate' (the period of imperial rule beginning with Diocletian, when emperors adopted the title 'Dominus') represented the explicit application of the household model to the entire empire: the emperor was the master, and the citizens were his household.
In contemporary usage, 'dominate' carries connotations of overwhelming superiority — in sports (a team dominates a game), in business (a company dominates a market), in landscape (a mountain dominates the skyline). The household origin has been entirely bleached out, but the structure of power it encoded — one entity exercising authority over all others — remains the word's essential meaning.