The English word "kidney" designates one of the pair of bean-shaped organs located in the abdominal cavity, responsible for filtering blood, removing waste, and regulating fluid balance. Its etymology is somewhat uncertain, but the term as it appears in Middle English—spelled "kidnei"—dates from the 14th century. This Middle English form replaced an earlier Old English term, "nēre," which is cognate with German "Niere" and Dutch "nier," both referring to the same organ. The replacement of "nēre" by "kidney" marks a notable lexical shift in English anatomical vocabulary during the Middle English period.
The second element of "kidney," represented in Middle English as "-nei," is generally agreed to derive from the Old English word "ǣg," meaning "egg." This element likely alludes to the organ’s characteristic egg-like shape. The presence of "ǣg" in the compound is consistent with a common practice in Old English and other Germanic languages of using shape-based metaphors in anatomical terminology.
The first element, "kid-," is more problematic and remains a subject of scholarly debate. One proposed origin is the Old English "cwið" or "cwiþ," meaning "womb" or "belly." If this derivation is correct, the original compound would have conveyed a meaning akin to "belly-egg" or "womb-egg," a vivid and descriptive phrase referring to the organ’s location within the body and its shape. This interpretation fits well with the tendency in Old English to form compound words that combine a locative or functional element with a descriptive noun.
the proposed connection to "cwið" or "cwiþ" is not definitively established. The phonological and semantic developments from "cwið" to "kid-" are not straightforward, and no direct attestation of the intermediate forms exists. Alternative explanations for the "kid-" element have been suggested but lack strong evidence. Consequently, the ultimate origin of the first element remains uncertain.
The replacement of the Old English "nēre" by "kidney" in Middle English may reflect dialectal variation, semantic shifts, or influence from other linguistic sources, though no clear borrowing from another language is attested. The Old English "nēre" itself is inherited from Proto-Germanic *nērō, which is the source of German "Niere" and Dutch "nier." These cognates demonstrate a common Germanic root for the organ’s name, which was supplanted in English by the compound "kidney."
"kidney" is a Middle English compound word formed from two Old English elements, with the second element "-nei" derived from "ǣg" meaning "egg," and the first element "kid-" possibly from "cwið" or "cwiþ," meaning "womb" or "belly." The compound likely originated as a descriptive term for the organ’s shape and position within the body. The term replaced the earlier Old English "nēre," which is cognate with other Germanic terms for the kidney. Despite the plausible reconstruction, the precise etymology of the first element remains uncertain, and the word’s ultimate origin cannot be conclusively determined.