The word 'lock' descends from Old English 'loc,' meaning 'bolt,' 'bar,' 'fastening,' or 'enclosure,' from Proto-Germanic *lukką, from the PIE root *lewg- meaning 'to bend' or 'to turn.' The semantic evolution from 'bending' to 'locking' makes physical sense: the earliest locking mechanisms involved a bent bolt or bar that was turned or slid into a socket to secure a door. The same root produced the Old English verb 'lūcan' (to close, to lock, to intertwine) and Gothic 'lūkan' (to lock, to shut).
A fascinating homophonic twin exists in 'lock' meaning a curl or tress of hair, from Old English 'locc.' Though spelled identically in Modern English, these are technically distinct words in Old English — 'loc' (fastening, with a short vowel) versus 'locc' (hair, with a geminate consonant). However, both may ultimately derive from the same PIE root *lewg- ('to bend'): a lock of hair is something curled or twisted, and a lock on a door involves a bent or turned bolt. If this connection is valid, the two
The Germanic cognates reveal an interesting semantic spread. German 'Loch' means 'hole' or 'opening' — apparently the reverse of 'closure,' but the connection lies in the idea of an enclosed space accessed through an opening. Old Norse 'lok' meant 'end' or 'conclusion' (the closing of something) as well as 'lock' or 'lid.' Gothic 'lūkan' meant 'to shut.' Old High German
The technology of locks has a deep archaeological record. Pin-tumbler locks originated in ancient Egypt around 2000 BCE — large wooden mechanisms operated by wooden keys. The Romans advanced lock technology significantly, creating small metal warded locks with keys small enough to carry on one's person. Roman keys were sometimes cast as finger rings, allowing
The canal lock — a chamber with gates at each end used to raise or lower boats between different water levels — borrows the name from the fastening sense: the gates 'lock' the water in. The first pound locks (enclosed chambers) appeared in China in the tenth century and in Europe in the fifteenth century. The system of canal locks made inland waterway navigation possible across terrain with significant elevation changes and was a critical enabling technology of the Industrial Revolution.
In English, 'lock' has generated a rich vocabulary of compounds and metaphors. 'Padlock' (from Middle English 'padlok') combines an uncertain first element (possibly 'pad' in the sense of a basket or pannier, from the lock's portable nature) with 'lock.' 'Deadlock' originally meant a lock that could only be opened with a key (no spring mechanism), and the figurative sense of 'complete standstill' developed from the idea of a mechanism that cannot be moved. 'Locksmith' dates from the fourteenth century
The phrase 'lock, stock, and barrel' (meaning completely, entirely) comes from firearms: the lock (firing mechanism), stock (wooden body), and barrel (metal tube) constitute the entire gun. 'Under lock and key' means securely confined. 'Lockdown' — a security protocol restricting movement — entered general usage in the late twentieth century from prison terminology and gained worldwide currency during the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020, demonstrating the word's continued ability to generate new compounds in response to new realities.