The word 'mile' is a direct inheritance from the Roman Empire, one of the most tangible linguistic traces left by Roman occupation across Western Europe. It descends from Latin 'mīlle passuum,' literally 'a thousand paces,' where each 'passus' was a double step — the distance from where one foot leaves the ground to where it lands again two steps later — roughly five Roman feet or about 4.86 modern feet. A thousand of these double steps gave the Roman mile a length of approximately 4,856 modern feet.
The word entered Old English as 'mīl,' borrowed directly from Latin during or shortly after the period of Roman Britain (43–410 CE). Roman roads crisscrossed Britain, and milestones ('mīliāria') marked distances along them — many of these stone markers survive today. The borrowing was practical: the Anglo-Saxons inherited the roads and kept the unit. Cognate forms appear across Germanic languages
The modern English statute mile of 5,280 feet was not the Roman distance. For centuries, the English mile varied regionally, sometimes meaning 5,000 feet, sometimes more. In 1593, during the reign of Elizabeth I, Parliament passed a statute defining the mile as exactly eight furlongs. A furlong ('furrow-long,' the length of a plowed furrow) was already
The Latin root 'mīlle' (thousand) has been immensely productive in English. 'Millennium' (a thousand years), 'million' (from Italian 'milione,' an augmentative of 'mille'), and 'millimeter' all descend from it. The prefix 'milli-' in metric terminology means one-thousandth. 'Milestone' originally meant a Roman road marker showing distance in miles; its figurative sense of 'a significant event' dates
The nautical mile, a separate unit equal to one minute of arc of latitude (approximately 6,076 feet or 1,852 meters), was formalized in the nineteenth century and has no etymological connection to 'mīlle passuum' beyond sharing the word 'mile.' Its adoption reflects the word's semantic broadening: 'mile' had become the generic English term for a long standard distance, available for reassignment to a new technical value.
In everyday speech, 'mile' extends far beyond measurement. Phrases like 'go the extra mile,' 'miss by a mile,' and 'miles ahead' use the word figuratively to convey large distances or efforts, demonstrating how deeply a two-thousand-year-old Roman military measurement has embedded itself in the English imagination.