The word 'millennium' entered English in the seventeenth century from Late Latin 'millennium,' a compound of 'mille' (thousand) and 'annus' (year). Its original context was theological: the Book of Revelation (20:1-6) describes a period during which Satan is bound and Christ reigns on earth for a thousand years. Early Christian writers coined 'millennium' (and the Greek equivalent 'chiliasm,' from 'chílioi,' thousand) to name this prophesied period. The word gradually secularized, coming to mean any span of a thousand years.
The Latin 'mille' (thousand) has an uncertain PIE etymology. Unlike the words for smaller numbers (one through ten, hundred), which are well-attested across Indo-European branches, the words for 'thousand' vary considerably among the daughter languages, suggesting either late development or multiple innovations. Latin 'mille' does not obviously correspond to Greek 'chílioi,' Gothic 'þūsundi' (from which English 'thousand'), or Sanskrit 'sahásra.' Some scholars have proposed
Regardless of its PIE origin, 'mille' generated a large word family. 'Mile' comes from Latin 'mīlle passūs' (a thousand paces — a double-step being about 1.48 meters, so a thousand of them equaling roughly 1,480 meters). The Roman road system, built in miles, spread the unit across the empire. 'Million' is Italian 'milione,' an augmentative of 'mille' — literally 'a great thousand,' meaning a thousand thousands. 'Billion,' 'trillion,' and the higher powers
The theological concept of the millennium profoundly influenced Western thought. 'Millennialism' or 'millenarianism' — the belief in an imminent thousand-year kingdom of righteousness — has motivated religious and political movements throughout history. The Münster Rebellion (1534-1535), the Fifth Monarchy Men of the English Civil War, the Millerites of 1840s America, and various modern apocalyptic movements all drew on millennial expectations. The secular version of millennialism — the belief in an imminent age of perfection brought about by revolution, technology
The approach of the year 2000 brought 'millennium' into everyday vocabulary worldwide. 'Y2K' anxiety (the fear that computer systems would fail at the date rollover), millennium celebrations, and the cultural sense of a turning point all invested the word with unprecedented popular weight. The debate over whether the new millennium began on January 1, 2000, or January 1, 2001, demonstrated both popular attachment to round numbers and pedantic attachment to precise counting (since there was no Year 0, the first millennium ran from 1 CE to 1000 CE, and the third millennium technically began on January 1, 2001).
The adjective 'millennial' has acquired a new meaning in the twenty-first century: a member of the generation born roughly between 1981 and 1996, who came of age around the turn of the millennium. 'Millennial' as a generational label has become one of the most-discussed demographic categories in contemporary culture, carrying connotations (some stereotypical) of digital nativism, economic precarity, and cultural attitudes distinct from previous generations. The word has thus migrated from Christian eschatology to calendar arithmetic to demographic sociology — a thousand years of meaning compressed into a single term.