Femur is a direct borrowing from Latin, where it simply meant thigh. The word's deeper Indo-European etymology remains genuinely uncertain. Some historical linguists have proposed a connection to a PIE root related to suckling or nourishment, linking the thigh to the nursing position of infants. Others see a possible relationship with Latin fecundus (fertile, fruitful), associating the upper leg with the generative region of the body. Neither theory has achieved consensus.
The Latin word was used in classical texts by Cicero, Pliny, and others to mean the thigh as a body part, not specifically the bone. The narrowing to mean the thigh bone occurred when 18th-century anatomists standardized skeletal terminology in medical Latin. Before this formalization, English medical texts typically used thigh bone, and many non-specialist contexts still do.
The femur holds several anatomical superlatives. It is the longest bone in the human body, averaging about 48 centimeters in adult males. It is the heaviest and by most measures the strongest, capable of withstanding compressive forces of over 1,700 newtons in normal loading conditions. The spherical head of the femur fits into the acetabulum of the pelvis to form the hip joint, one of the most mobile and heavily loaded joints in the body.
In forensic anthropology, the femur is among the most useful bones for identification. Its length correlates reliably with overall stature, allowing forensic scientists to estimate a person's height from the femur alone. Various features of the bone also provide information about sex, age, and physical activity patterns during life.
The adjective femoral, describing anything related to the thigh region, appears frequently in medical terminology: the femoral artery, femoral nerve, and femoral vein are all critical structures that run along or near the bone. A femoral fracture remains one of the most serious orthopedic injuries, particularly in elderly patients.