The verb 'hide' carries one of the most primal human concepts — the impulse to conceal, to make something unseen, to shelter from discovery. Its etymology reaches back to the earliest reconstructable stages of the Indo-European language family, suggesting that the concept of hiding was fundamental to the people who spoke the ancestor of most European and many Asian languages.
Old English 'hȳdan' was a weak verb meaning 'to hide, to conceal, to preserve from sight or danger.' The long vowel /yː/ (a rounded front vowel, like French 'u') underwent unrounding to /iː/ in most Middle English dialects, then shifted to the diphthong /aɪ/ during the Great Vowel Shift, producing modern 'hide' /haɪd/.
The word derives from West Germanic *hūdijan, a verb formed from a root meaning 'to cover, to conceal.' The exact reconstruction of the Proto-Germanic form is debated — some scholars posit *hūdijaną, others *hūðijaną — but the West Germanic distribution is clear: the verb appears in Old English but is absent from North Germanic (Old Norse) and Gothic, suggesting it may have been a West Germanic innovation or that the North and East Germanic branches lost it.
The PIE root is reconstructed as *kewdʰ- (to hide, conceal), though this reconstruction is not universally accepted. If correct, it connects 'hide' to Greek 'keuthein' (to hide, to conceal within) and 'keuthos' (a hiding place, the depths), which Homer uses for the depths of the sea and the hidden places of the earth. The Welsh cognate 'cuddio' (to hide) and its noun 'cudd' (hiding place) also likely trace to the same root, providing a Celtic connection.
The verb 'hide' is entirely unrelated to the noun 'hide' meaning animal skin, despite their identical modern spelling and pronunciation. The skin word comes from Old English 'hȳd' (skin, hide), from Proto-Germanic *hūdiz, from PIE *kewt- (skin, covering), which also produced Latin 'cutis' (skin) — source of English 'cuticle,' 'cutaneous,' and 'subcutaneous.' The convergence of 'hȳdan' (to conceal) and 'hȳd' (skin) into the same modern form is a coincidence of sound change, not evidence of shared meaning, though folk etymology has sometimes connected them (the skin as something that hides or covers the body).
The past tense of 'hide' — 'hid' — and the past participle 'hidden' reflect the word's adoption into the strong verb pattern during the Middle English period. Old English 'hȳdan' was originally a weak verb (past tense 'hȳdde'), but it acquired strong forms (hid/hidden) by analogy with verbs like 'ride/rid/ridden' and 'bite/bit/bitten.' This is an example of a weak verb being pulled into a strong conjugation class — the opposite of the more common historical trend in English.
The children's game 'hide-and-seek' is attested by name from the early eighteenth century, but the game itself is certainly far older — versions of it are found in virtually every culture. The game's universality suggests something deeply rooted in the human experience of concealment and discovery, the primal tension between hiding and finding that the word 'hide' itself encodes.
'Hideout' (a secret refuge, especially for criminals) appeared in American English in the late nineteenth century. 'Hideaway' (a secluded retreat) dates from the same period. 'Hidebound' — now meaning rigid or inflexible — originally described cattle whose skin was so tight to their bodies from poor feeding that it could not be easily separated, connecting to the other 'hide' (skin), though the metaphorical extension to human narrowmindedness bridges both words.
In computing, 'hidden' has become a technical term — hidden files, hidden fields, hidden layers in neural networks — extending the word's basic concept of concealment into the digital realm. The concept of data being 'hidden' from users while remaining accessible to systems is a distinctly modern application of a very old word.
The religious and literary traditions of English are rich with 'hide' imagery. The Psalms speak of hiding under God's wings. Adam and Eve hide from God in the Garden. The parable of the talents involves money hidden in the ground. In each case, hiding carries moral weight — concealment can be refuge or evasion, protection or cowardice, depending
The word's phonological journey from Old English /hyːdan/ through Middle English /hiːdən/ to modern /haɪd/ exemplifies three of the most important sound changes in English history: the unrounding of /yː/ to /iː/, the Great Vowel Shift from /iː/ to /aɪ/, and the loss of unstressed final syllables. In these three shifts, compressed into about five centuries, lies much of the story of how Old English became the language we speak today.