## Down
*Adverb, preposition, adjective* | Old English *dūne* | Proto-Germanic *\*dūnaz*
### The Hidden Hill
Every time a speaker of English says *down* — down the stairs, sit down, the sun is going down — they are invoking a hill that no longer exists in the language. The word is a ghost of landscape.
Old English had a noun *dūn*, meaning a hill, an open elevated ground. It survives intact in English place-names across the southern counties: the *Downs*, those long chalk ridges of Sussex, Surrey, and Kent — the South Downs rolling green toward the Channel, the North Downs folding through Surrey into the Garden of England. Every walker who has crested a down and looked seaward is standing on the etymological bedrock of the word.
But the directional adverb did not descend from *dūn* alone. It came from the phrase *of dūne* — literally *off the hill*, or in its worn-down Old English form, *adūne*: the prefix *a-* (itself a reduced form of *of*, meaning *off* or *away from*) fused with *dūn* (hill). To go *adūne* was to go off the hill, to descend the slope. Over centuries the phrase contracted, the initial vowel dropped, and *dūne* alone carried the meaning of *downward*. The hill had already vanished from the word before the Middle Ages ended.
This is precisely the kind of semantic archaeology that repays the patience Jacob Grimm brought to the Germanic lexicon: a word so ordinary, so high-frequency, so phonologically reduced, that its speakers pass over it ten thousand times without suspecting what is buried beneath it.
### The Proto-Germanic Root
The Old English *dūn* belongs to Proto-Germanic *\*dūnaz*, a word for hill or elevated ground. Its cognates spread across the Germanic world. Dutch preserves *duin* — a sand-hill, a dune along the coastal margin — and it is from Dutch *duin* that English borrowed *dune* in the nineteenth century, primarily in geological and desert contexts. The irony is near-perfect: English had the word all along, worn smooth into *down*, then borrowed back the cognate form from Dutch to name the very thing the original word denoted. *Dune* and *down* are the same word, separated by a thousand
### The Celtic Stratum
Before the Germanic peoples settled Britain, Celtic-speaking populations used a closely related word for hill-fort and defended high ground: Old Irish *dún*, Welsh *din*. The sound correspondences are regular, and the semantic overlap — a high, defensible place — is exact. This suggests either a shared inheritance from a deeper stratum of the lexicon or early contact between the Celtic and Germanic worlds.
The Irish form persists vigorously in place-names. *Dún Laoghaire* — the fort of Laoghaire — on the Dublin coast. *Dundee* in Scotland, *Dunbar* on the Lothian shore, *Dunwich* on the Suffolk coast. Each carries the hill-fort inside it.
### Compound Witnesses
Several English compounds preserve the original topographic sense under a layer of metaphorical extension.
*Sundown* — the moment the sun descends below the horizon — encodes the old image with fidelity. The sky was conceived as a landscape with a gradient: the sun travels its arc and then goes *off the hill*, descends the far slope, disappears.
*Downtown* carries a different but equally revealing history. In nineteenth-century American English, the lower end of a city — the commercial waterfront district — was called *downtown* because it lay at the lower topographic elevation, toward the river or harbour. The word originally described a real gradient in real terrain. As cities spread and flattened, *downtown* became purely conventional, meaning simply *the central commercial district*, regardless of elevation. The hill has been forgotten twice over: once inside *down* itself, once inside the compound.
### The Feather Word
There is a second *down* in English — the soft under-plumage of birds, the filling of quilts and winter coats — and it is an entirely separate word with no connection to hills or direction. This *down* comes from Old Norse *dúnn*, meaning fine feathers, soft hair. The Norse traders and settlers who shaped so much of northern English vocabulary brought this word into the language in the Viking Age. Two words, one spelling
### What the Common Words Conceal
Grimm understood that the most common words in a language are often the most revealing precisely because they have been worn the smoothest. A rare technical term retains its shape through infrequent use. A word said ten thousand times per generation is ground down, compacted, fused, until its origins are invisible to the casual observer. *Down* is one of the highest-frequency words in the English lexicon — and it contains a lost hill, a Dutch dune, a Celtic fortress, and a Norse feather, all collapsed into four letters that most speakers