The word 'list,' in its everyday sense of a series of items written one after another, has a surprisingly physical origin. It descends from a Germanic root meaning not 'a series of things' but 'a strip, a border, an edge.' The path from textile border to organized enumeration runs through the material culture of medieval writing.
The Old English word 'līste' meant a border or hem — specifically the selvage of a piece of woven cloth, the narrow finished edge that prevents unraveling. Cognates appear across the Germanic languages: Old High German 'līsta' (strip, border), Old Norse 'lista' (strip, fillet), and Dutch 'lijst' (frame, list). All point to a Proto-Germanic form *līstō meaning a narrow strip or edge. Old French 'liste' (border, band, strip) was
The semantic journey from 'strip of material' to 'enumerated series' is concrete and traceable. In medieval administrative practice, clerks and scribes wrote inventories, rosters, and tallies on narrow strips of parchment or paper — the physical format that was most convenient for a series of names or items stacked vertically. The word for the material object (the strip) gradually transferred to its content (the series of entries). By the late sixteenth century, 'list' in English had fully
The jousting 'lists' — the enclosed area where medieval tournaments were held — preserve the physical sense. The 'lists' were originally the strips of cloth or wooden barriers that marked the boundaries of the arena. To 'enter the lists' was literally to step inside the bordered enclosure, and the phrase survives metaphorically for anyone who takes up a competitive challenge.
The verb 'to list' (to tilt or lean to one side, said of a ship) is a different word entirely, probably from an Old English verb meaning 'to desire, to please' (related to 'lust'), and the nautical sense developed from the idea of a ship inclining toward where it 'wished' to go. This homonym has caused occasional etymological confusion.
'Enlist' appeared in the seventeenth century, meaning literally to enter one's name on a list — specifically a military muster roll. The practice of maintaining lists of soldiers, taxpayers, voters, and members has made 'list' one of the most administratively important words in English. 'Blacklist' (a list of persons under suspicion or disfavor) dates from the early seventeenth century, and 'checklist' from the early twentieth.
In the digital age, the 'list' has become one of the fundamental data structures in computing — an ordered sequence of elements. The humble strip of cloth has traveled from the loom to the scriptorium to the ballot box to the server rack, retaining its essential character as an orderly, sequential arrangement throughout.