The word 'elegant' entered English in the late fifteenth century from Latin 'elegantem,' the accusative form of 'elegāns,' meaning 'choice, fine, tasteful, discriminating.' The Latin adjective originated as the present participle of 'ēligere' (to pick out, to choose, to select), a compound of the prefix 'ex-' (out, out of) and the verb 'legere' (to gather, to pick, to choose, to read). The etymological sense of 'elegāns' is thus 'one who picks out carefully, one who exercises discriminating choice' — elegance as the visible result of refined selection.
The Latin verb 'legere' is one of the most productive roots in the Western vocabulary. It descends from PIE *leǵ- (to gather, to collect), which produced Greek 'légein' (λέγειν, to gather, to say — the shift from gathering to speaking may have passed through 'gathering words' or 'picking one's words') and its enormous family of derivatives: 'logic,' 'logos,' '-logy,' 'dialogue,' 'catalogue,' 'analogy.' Within Latin, 'legere' generated 'ēligere' (to choose out → 'elect,' 'election,' 'eligible'), 'colligere' (to gather together → 'collect,' 'collection'), 'neglegere' (to not pick up, to disregard → 'neglect'), 'intellegere' (to read between, to understand → 'intelligent,' 'intellectual'), 'dīligere' (to single out, to esteem → 'diligent'), and 'lēgere' in its reading
In classical Latin, 'elegāns' had both positive and negative connotations. Positively, it described refined taste, educated discrimination, and polished style — Cicero used it approvingly of prose that was carefully crafted and aesthetically pleasing. Negatively, it could suggest excessive fastidiousness or fussiness — picking too carefully, being overly particular. The negative sense did not survive into the Romance languages or into English
The English adoption of 'elegant' in the late fifteenth century coincided with the Renaissance influx of Latinate vocabulary. Early English usage follows the Latin sense closely: 'elegant' described things characterized by taste, refinement, and careful selection. It applied to prose style, personal bearing, architecture, and dress. The word competed with native English alternatives like 'fine,' 'comely,' and 'seemly,' but its Latinate prestige gave it a distinct register — 'elegant' implied
By the eighteenth century, 'elegant' had become a keyword of aesthetic discourse. Philosophers and critics used it to describe a quality intermediate between beauty and mere correctness — an aesthetic of restraint, proportion, and quiet refinement. This usage crystallized in the scientific and mathematical sense of 'elegant,' still current today: an 'elegant proof' or 'elegant solution' is one that achieves its result with maximum economy and clarity, using no more apparatus than necessary. This mathematical sense preserves the etymological core: elegance
The noun 'elegance' entered English around 1510, from Latin 'elegantia.' The adverb 'elegantly' followed in the sixteenth century. The family of words shares the quality of emphasizing discrimination and selection over mere opulence — in this, 'elegant' differs from 'luxurious,' 'opulent,' or 'lavish,' which emphasize abundance. Elegance is defined by what is omitted as much as by what is included, a principle that connects the word's Latin etymology to its modern aesthetic meaning