The word 'milk' descends from Old English 'meoluc' (also 'milc,' 'meolc'), from Proto-Germanic *meluks, from PIE *h₂melǵ- (to milk, to press or stroke). The word's ultimate origin lies in the physical act of milking — the rhythmic stroking or pressing of an animal's udder to extract the fluid. The noun 'milk' developed from the verb 'to milk,' not the other way around: the substance was named for the action that produced it.
The PIE root *h₂melǵ- is one of the key pieces of evidence for the pastoral economy of early Indo-European society. Its wide attestation — in Germanic, Italic, Celtic, Hellenic, Balto-Slavic, and other branches — confirms that the Proto-Indo-Europeans kept domesticated milk-producing animals (cattle, goats, sheep) and that milking was a central activity of daily life. Latin 'mulgēre' (to milk), Greek 'amélgein' (to milk), Old Irish 'bligid' (to milk, with metathesis of the initial consonants), and Russian 'molokó' (молоко, milk) all descend from this root.
The Proto-Germanic form *meluks shows a characteristic development: the verbal root *h₂melǵ- was nominalized with a *-s suffix to produce the name for the substance. The form passed regularly through the Germanic languages: Old Norse 'mjólk' (modern Icelandic 'mjólk,' Swedish 'mjölk,' Danish 'mælk'), Old High German 'miluh' (modern German 'Milch'), Old Saxon 'miluk,' Dutch 'melk,' and Gothic 'miluks.' The consistency of the form confirms that milking and milk consumption were deeply embedded in Proto-Germanic culture.
The Old English form 'meoluc' had several variant spellings reflecting dialectal pronunciation: 'meolc,' 'milc,' 'mioluc.' The modern form 'milk' descends from the shorter variant 'milc,' which was originally a West Saxon dialectal form. The vowel shift from 'eo' to 'i' occurred in late Old English and early Middle English. The word has been remarkably stable since then: 'milk' is pronounced and spelled essentially the same in 2024 as it was in 1300.
The adjective 'milch' (giving milk, as in 'milch cow') preserves an older adjectival formation from the same root. It is now archaic in most dialects but survives in technical and literary usage. German 'Milch' functions as both adjective and noun, preserving the dual usage that English has largely lost.
The cultural significance of milk in Indo-European societies is reflected in mythology and language alike. The Sanskrit word for milk, 'dugdha' (from a different root meaning 'to suck'), appears in the Vedic hymns in the context of cosmic creation myths. The Norse creation myth describes the primordial cow Auðumbla, whose milk nourished the first giant Ymir. The Greek word for the Milky Way, 'galaxías kýklos' (milky circle), from 'gála' (milk), gave English the word 'galaxy.' According to myth, the Milky Way was formed when Hera's breast
Modern derivatives and compounds include 'milkmaid,' 'milkman,' 'milkweed,' 'milksop' (a weak person, literally bread soaked in milk), 'milky,' and 'milk tooth' (a child's first teeth, so called because they appear during the period of nursing). The verb 'to milk' has developed a strong metaphorical sense: 'to milk someone' means to extract money, information, or advantage from them by persistent effort — preserving the original physical image of the steady, squeezing motion at the udder.