The word 'float' descends from Old English 'flotian,' meaning 'to rest on the surface of water' or 'to swim,' from Proto-Germanic *flutōną, from the Proto-Indo-European root *plew-, meaning 'to flow,' 'to swim,' or 'to float.' This PIE root is one of the great water-words of the ancient language, generating terms for liquid motion across every branch of the family.
The PIE root *plew- produced a remarkable cluster of English words through the Germanic channel alone. 'Flow' (from Old English 'flōwan'), 'flood' (from Old English 'flōd,' a great flowing), 'fleet' (originally 'a place where water flows,' then 'a group of ships' — the Thames estuary location that gave its name to London's Fleet Street was a creek), 'fly' (from Old English 'flēogan,' originally conceived as flowing through air), 'flight' (the act of flowing through air), 'fledge' (to grow feathers for flying), and 'flutter' (to flow unsteadily through air) all trace back to *plew-. The semantic thread connecting them is continuous motion — whether of water, ships, or airborne creatures.
Through Latin, the same root gave 'pluvia' (rain — water flowing from the sky), generating English 'pluvial' (relating to rain). Through Greek 'pleîn' (to sail, to float), it produced 'pleuston' (floating organisms in ecology) and influenced nautical vocabulary. Sanskrit 'plavate' (he swims, he floats) shows the same root in the Indo-Iranian branch.
Old English distinguished between 'flotian' (to float, an intransitive verb describing a passive state) and 'swimman' (to swim, describing active propulsion through water). This distinction persists: floating is passive and buoyant, swimming is active and muscular. A log floats; a person swims. Yet in Old English 'flotian' could also mean 'to swim,' and the boundary was blurrier than in modern usage.
The noun 'float' developed multiple specialized senses. A 'float' as a buoyant device (a fishing float, a life float) dates from the medieval period. A 'float' as a decorated vehicle in a parade appeared in the early seventeenth century, originally referring to a platform mounted on a wheeled vehicle, possibly from the idea of a platform 'floating' above the street. A 'float' in finance (the amount of money in circulation, or the period between a transaction and its settlement) emerged in the nineteenth century.
The phrase 'to float an idea' (to propose it tentatively, to let it drift into public discourse and see if it sinks or survives) appeared in the nineteenth century. 'To float a company' (to launch it on the stock market) uses the same metaphor: releasing something onto the surface of the market to see if it finds buoyancy.
In physics, floating is governed by Archimedes' principle (c. 250 BCE): an object floats when the weight of the water it displaces equals or exceeds its own weight. The ancient Greek mathematician supposedly discovered this principle while stepping into a bath and noticing the water level rise — a story that, whether true or legendary, connects the physics of floating to one of science's oldest eureka moments.
The word 'float' thus captures a fundamental physical phenomenon — buoyancy, the resistance to sinking — and extends it into metaphors of gentleness, tentativeness, and passage. Things that float are unhurried; they move without effort, carried by forces beneath them. The etymology preserves this quality: from the flowing waters of PIE *plew- to the serene image of a leaf resting on a stream.