The word 'extrovert' (also spelled 'extravert') is a twentieth-century coinage formed from Latin 'extrā-' (outward, outside, beyond) and 'vertere' (to turn). Unlike most members of the '-vert' family — 'convert,' 'invert,' 'revert,' 'divert,' 'pervert,' 'subvert' — which have genuine Classical Latin ancestors, 'extrovert' was assembled from Latin parts in the modern era to serve as the complement of 'introvert' in personality psychology.
The word's creation is inseparable from the work of Carl Jung, who proposed the introversion-extraversion dimension as fundamental to personality in his 1921 'Psychologische Typen.' Jung used the German form 'extravertiert' (from 'extra-' + Latin 'vertere'), and the English translation used 'extravert.' In Jung's framework, the extravert is a person whose psychic energy flows outward — toward people, activities, and external objects. The extravert is energized by social interaction and external stimulation, and may feel
The spelling question — 'extravert' versus 'extrovert' — is one of the more interesting minor controversies in English orthography. The etymologically correct form is 'extravert,' using the Latin prefix 'extrā-' (outward). Jung used this form, and many psychologists continue to prefer it. However, the spelling 'extrovert,' with 'extro-' modeled on the 'intro-' of 'introvert,' became overwhelmingly popular in general English usage. The analogy was irresistible: if the inward-turning type is an 'intro-vert,' the outward-turning type should be an 'extro-vert.' By the mid-twentieth century, 'extrovert' had become the standard spelling in most dictionaries, though 'extravert' persists in academic
The concept of extraversion has been refined and debated continuously since Jung's original formulation. The Big Five personality model, the dominant framework in contemporary academic psychology, includes extraversion as one of its five major dimensions (alongside openness, conscientiousness, agreeableness, and neuroticism). In the Big Five model, extraversion encompasses not just sociability but also assertiveness, positive emotionality, excitement-seeking, and activity level. High extraversion correlates with a range of outcomes including larger social networks, higher reported happiness
The neuroscience of extraversion has been explored extensively since the 1960s. Hans Eysenck proposed that extraverts have lower baseline levels of cortical arousal and therefore seek external stimulation to reach an optimal arousal level, while introverts have higher baseline arousal and seek to avoid overstimulation. This arousal theory, though refined and challenged over subsequent decades, remains influential and provides a biological mechanism for the personality difference that Jung described in psychological terms.
Culturally, Western societies — particularly American culture — have been described as favoring extraversion. The 'extrovert ideal,' as Susan Cain termed it, values assertiveness, sociability, and outward energy, often at the expense of introverted qualities like reflection, deep concentration, and solitary creativity. This cultural bias is reflected in educational settings (group work, class participation grades), workplace norms (open-plan offices, team-building exercises), and social expectations (the pressure to be outgoing and 'networked').
Phonologically, 'extrovert' mirrors its complement 'introvert': three syllables with stress on the first (/ˈɛk.stɹə.vɜːt/). The consonant cluster /kstɹ/ in the first syllable is one of the more challenging sequences in English phonology, and some speakers simplify it to /ɛstɹə/ in casual speech.
The word's rapid rise from technical psychology to everyday English is remarkable. Within a few decades of Jung's 1921 publication, 'extrovert' and 'introvert' had become part of the basic vocabulary that English speakers use to describe personality. This speed of adoption reflects the power of the underlying concept: the idea that people differ fundamentally in whether their energy turns inward or outward resonates deeply with lived experience.