The word 'introvert' was coined in the mid-seventeenth century from Latin elements: 'intrō-' (inward, to the inside) and 'vertere' (to turn). In its earliest English uses, it was a rare verb meaning 'to turn inward' — used in anatomy for physical inward turning (such as a body part folded in upon itself) and in theology for the spiritual practice of directing attention inward in contemplation.
The word's transformation into a cornerstone of personality psychology is primarily the work of Carl Gustav Jung. In his 1921 book 'Psychologische Typen' (translated into English in 1923 as 'Psychological Types'), Jung proposed that people could be classified along a fundamental dimension: introversion versus extraversion. The introvert, in Jung's framework, directs psychic energy inward — toward internal thoughts, feelings, and reflections. The extravert directs energy outward — toward external objects,
Jung's terminology built on earlier usage by other psychologists. The terms 'introversion' and 'extraversion' had been used as early as 1918 in English-language psychological literature, and the German psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler had employed similar concepts. But it was Jung who gave the terms their enduring definitions and made them central to personality theory.
The popular understanding of introversion has drifted significantly from Jung's original concept. In contemporary culture, 'introvert' is often equated with 'shy,' 'antisocial,' or 'quiet,' while 'extrovert' means 'outgoing' and 'sociable.' Jung's formulation was more nuanced: introversion was about the direction of energy and interest, not about social ability. An introvert might be perfectly skilled
The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), developed by Katharine Cook Briggs and her daughter Isabel Briggs Myers based on Jung's typology, made the introversion-extraversion dimension one of its four axes (I/E). The MBTI became one of the most widely administered personality assessments in the world, introducing millions of people to Jung's terminology. The Big Five personality model, the dominant framework in academic psychology, includes a related dimension called 'extraversion,' with introversion at the opposite pole.
Etymologically, 'introvert' is a perfect complement to 'extrovert' (sometimes spelled 'extravert'): one turns inward, the other turns outward. The Latin prefix 'intrō-' (inward) is the directional opposite of 'extrā-' (outward). Both words were formed from Classical Latin elements combined in Modern Latin, following the pattern of genuine Latin compounds like 'convert,' 'invert,' and 'divert.'
The word's phonology is distinctive among the '-vert' family. Unlike most '-vert' words, which are two-syllable words with stress on the second syllable, 'introvert' is three syllables with stress on the first (/ˈɪn.tɹə.vɜːt/). This reflects its compound nature — the prefix 'intro-' carries more weight than single-syllable prefixes like 're-,' 'di-,' or 'per-.' The noun and the adjective share the same
In twenty-first-century internet culture, 'introvert' has become a significant identity category. Memes, articles, and social media posts about introvert life — the need for alone time, the dread of small talk, the exhaustion of social events — have created a shared vocabulary and community for self-identified introverts. This cultural moment represents the word's latest transformation: from a seventeenth-century anatomical term to a twenty-first-century identity label.