The verb 'introduce' entered English around 1425 from Latin 'intrōdūcere' (past participle 'intrōductum'), composed of the adverb 'intrō-' (inward, to the inside) and the verb 'dūcere' (to lead). The literal meaning is 'to lead inward' — to bring someone or something from outside into an interior space, group, or context.
The word belongs to the extensive family of English derivatives from Latin 'dūcere' (to lead), which traces back to the Proto-Indo-European root *dewk-. Where 'produce' leads forward, 'reduce' leads back, 'conduct' leads together, and 'deduce' leads down, 'introduce' leads inward — each prefix specifying a different direction for the fundamental act of leading.
The physical sense — leading or bringing something into a space — was the original English meaning. One introduces a tube into a vein, introduces a bill into Parliament, introduces a new species into an ecosystem. In each case, something is 'led inward' from outside. The biological sense of 'introduced species' (a species brought into a region where it is not native) has become ecologically significant, as many introduced species become invasive when their new environment lacks the checks that controlled them in their original habitat.
The social sense — presenting one person to another — became the dominant everyday meaning by the seventeenth century. A social introduction 'leads' a newcomer 'into' an established group or relationship. The elaborate etiquette of formal introductions that developed in European courts and salons reflects the importance of this ritual: who introduces whom, in what order, and with what formulas. Emily Post and other etiquette authorities devoted extensive attention to the rules of introduction, treating this
The intellectual sense — bringing a subject or idea to someone's attention — developed alongside the social sense. To introduce a topic is to lead it into a discussion; to introduce someone to a subject is to lead them into their first encounter with it. The noun 'introduction' serves double duty: it is both the social act of presenting people and the opening section of a book or speech that 'leads the reader in' to the subject matter.
In legislative usage, to 'introduce' a bill is to formally present it to a legislative body for consideration — to lead it into the institutional process. This sense has been standard in English parliamentary and congressional vocabulary since the seventeenth century. A bill is 'introduced,' 'read,' 'debated,' and eventually 'passed' or 'defeated,' with 'introduction' being the first formal step.
The compound 'reintroduce' adds the prefix 're-' (again) to create a word meaning to introduce again — often used in conservation biology for returning a species to a habitat from which it had disappeared. The reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone National Park (1995) is one of the most celebrated examples.
The noun 'introduction' (from Latin 'intrōductiōnem') entered English in the fourteenth century. Its most common use today may be as the opening section of a book, essay, or speech — the section that 'leads the reader in' to the main content. The abbreviated form 'intro' became standard informal English in the twentieth century and is now used for the opening of songs, podcasts, and other media.
Phonologically, 'introduce' carries primary stress on the third syllable and secondary stress on the first: /ˌɪn.tɹəˈdjuːs/. The three-syllable prefix 'intrō-' is unusual among the 'dūcere' compounds, most of which have monosyllabic prefixes. The length of the word contributes to its somewhat formal register.