The English preposition "for," used to indicate the person or thing that something is intended to benefit or is directed toward, traces its origins deep into the history of the Germanic languages and ultimately to the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) linguistic stage. Its earliest attested form in English is Old English "for," which carried a range of related meanings including "for," "on behalf of," "because of," "instead of," and "in place of." This Old English usage already encompassed both spatial and metaphorical senses, reflecting a semantic development that had taken place over centuries.
Etymologically, Old English "for" derives from Proto-Germanic *fura, a preposition meaning "before" or "in front of." This Proto-Germanic form itself is reconstructed on the basis of comparative evidence from various Germanic languages, all showing cognates with similar phonetic shapes and meanings. The root *fura is believed to have originated from the Proto-Indo-European root *preh₂-, which carried the fundamental meaning "before," "in front of," or "forward." This PIE root is well-attested and is the source of several cognates across the Indo-European family.
The PIE root *preh₂- is the ancestor not only of the Germanic *fura but also of a number of related words in other Indo-European branches. For example, Latin "pro," meaning "for" or "forward," and Greek "pró" (πρό), meaning "before," both derive from the same PIE root. These cognates share the core spatial notion of being "in front of" or "before" something, which is foundational to their later metaphorical extensions.
In the Germanic branch, the original spatial meaning of *fura as "before" or "in front of" gradually extended to include more abstract senses. The metaphorical shift from physical positioning to representing advocacy or benefit is particularly notable in the development of "for." The idea of standing "before" someone, literally in front of them, came to imply acting "on behalf of" that person, thus introducing the sense of representation or substitution. This semantic evolution is common in prepositions, where spatial relations often
By the time of Old English, "for" had already acquired a broad semantic range that included not only spatial and temporal meanings but also causal and purposive senses. It could express the beneficiary of an action ("for him"), the reason or cause ("for this reason"), or substitution ("instead of"). This versatility has persisted into Modern English, where "for" remains a highly productive preposition with multiple related uses.
It is important to distinguish the inherited Germanic "for" from later borrowings of similar words from Latin or Romance languages, such as "pro," which entered English primarily through learned borrowings in the medieval and early modern periods. The English "for" is not a borrowing but an inherited term, continuously used and adapted from Old English through Middle English to the present day.
The connection between "for" and other English words such as "fore," "before," "first," "former," "far," and "further" also stems from the same PIE root *preh₂-. These words share the fundamental notion of precedence or spatial orientation ahead of something else. For instance, "fore" and "before" explicitly denote temporal or spatial precedence, while "former" and "first" relate to order or rank. "Far" and "further," though semantically somewhat divergent, still retain the sense of distance extending forward or ahead. This network of related words illustrates
In summary, the English preposition "for" is an inherited Germanic word descending from Proto-Germanic *fura, itself derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *preh₂-, meaning "before" or "in front of." Its original spatial sense evolved metaphorically to express advocacy, benefit, and purpose, a development already present in Old English. This etymological lineage situates "for" within a broad Indo-European family of words related to spatial and temporal precedence, highlighting the deep historical roots of this common and versatile English preposition.