The word 'frost' descends from Old English 'frost' or 'forst,' a word that has changed remarkably little in over a thousand years of English. The Old English form comes from Proto-Germanic *frustaz, with cognates in German 'Frost,' Dutch 'vorst,' Swedish 'frost,' Danish 'frost,' and Old Norse 'frost.' The Proto-Germanic form derives from PIE *preus- (to freeze, to burn with cold), which produced Latin 'pruīna' (hoarfrost, rime — the white ice that forms on surfaces), and which may be related to the root *preus- meaning 'to burn.' The connection between freezing and burning is not accidental — extreme cold produces a burning sensation, and frostbite damages tissue in ways similar to burns.
The word 'freeze' is from the same Germanic root, and the two words form a pair: 'frost' is the noun (the condition and its visible result), 'freeze' is the verb (the process). 'Frozen' is the past participle. This family extends to 'frostbite' (tissue damage from freezing, first attested in the eighteenth century), 'hoarfrost' (the thick white frost that forms on cold surfaces, where 'hoar' means 'gray-haired' or 'ancient-looking'), 'permafrost' (permanently frozen ground, a term coined in 1943), and 'defrost' (to remove frost).
Frost formation is a specific physical process: when a surface cools below the dew point and below 0 degrees Celsius simultaneously, water vapor in the air deposits directly as ice crystals on that surface, without passing through a liquid phase. This is deposition, the reverse of sublimation. The intricate, feathery patterns of frost on windows — called 'fern frost' or 'frost flowers' — are formed by the crystal structure of ice, which grows along preferred axes determined by the hexagonal symmetry of the ice crystal lattice. Each frost pattern is influenced by tiny variations in temperature, humidity, and surface texture, producing
Frost has enormous agricultural significance. A late spring frost or an early autumn frost can destroy crops, and 'frost dates' — the average date of the last spring frost and first autumn frost in a given location — define the growing season and determine what crops can be cultivated. The development of frost prediction, from traditional folk knowledge (clear skies and still air predict frost) to modern numerical weather prediction, has been crucial to agriculture.
The surname Frost is a common English family name, originally a nickname for someone with white hair (like hoarfrost) or a cold temperament. The American poet Robert Frost (1874–1963), whose work is saturated with New England winter imagery, bore a name that became inseparable from his poetry. His poem 'Fire and Ice' (1920) — 'Some say the world will end in fire, / Some say in ice' — unknowingly recapitulates the etymological connection in the PIE root between freezing and burning.
In Norse mythology, frost was personified in the Frost Giants (hrímþursar, literally 'rime-giants'), the primordial beings who preceded the gods. The giant Ymir, from whose body the world was made, was a frost giant. The realm of Niflheim was a world of ice and frost, opposed to the fire realm of Muspelheim. The creation of the world, in Norse cosmology, occurred