## Minute
*Minute* (both the unit of time and the adjective meaning 'very small') descends from Latin *minuta*, the feminine past participle of *minuere*, 'to lessen, diminish.' The word entered English in two distinct streams — the noun from medieval astronomical practice, the adjective from classical Latin prose — and the two have coexisted, identically spelled but differently pronounced, for over five centuries.
The Latin verb *minuere* derives from the Proto-Indo-European root *\*mei-* (also written *\*mi-*), meaning 'small' or 'to diminish.' This root also produced Latin *minor* (smaller), *minimus* (smallest), *minister* (servant, lit. 'one who is lesser'), and *minus* (less). The PIE root *\*mei-* is attested across a wide family: Old Irish *míad* (honour, worth), Greek *meíōn* (less), and Sanskrit *miyate* (is diminished
The specific form *minuta* appears in the phrase *pars minuta prima* — 'first small part' — used in medieval Latin translations of Ptolemy's *Almagest*, referring to the first subdivision of a degree in sexagesimal (base-60) notation inherited from Babylonian mathematics.
## Historical Journey
### From Ptolemy to the Clock Face
The Babylonians divided the circle into 360 degrees and each degree into 60 parts. When Arabic scholars transmitted Greek astronomical texts into Latin in the 10th–12th centuries, translators rendered the sexagesimal fractions as *pars minuta prima* (first small part, i.e. 1/60 of a degree) and *pars minuta secunda* (second small part, i.e. 1/3600 of a degree). These are the direct etymological ancestors of *minute* and *second* as units of both
By the late 14th century, *minuta* had contracted to *minute* in Anglo-French and was being applied to the sixtieth part of an hour as mechanical clocks began dividing the hour face into finer graduations. The earliest attested English use of *minute* as a unit of time appears around 1380, in texts associated with Chaucer's circle.
### The Adjective Takes a Separate Path
The adjective *minute* (pronounced my-NYOOT), meaning 'extremely small or precise,' entered English directly from Latin *minutus* (past participle, masculine form) in the early 15th century, used in learned and scientific writing. It carried the sense of painstaking smallness — a minute examination, minute detail — without any connection to clock-time.
### Minutes as Records
A third usage — *the minutes* of a meeting — emerged in the 16th century, probably from the Latin phrase *minuta scriptura*, 'small writing,' referring to the rough draft or notes taken in brief before a fair copy was made. By the 17th century *minutes* had settled into its modern sense of an official record of proceedings, the 'small' referring not to duration but to the condensed, preliminary nature of the notes.
The family radiating from Latin *minuere* is broad:
- **Minor, minimum, minus** — direct Latin comparatives still in English - **Minister** — from *mini-ster* (one who is lesser, a servant), contrasted with *magi-ster* (one who is greater, a master) - **Minuet** — the dance, via French *menuet*, from *menu* (small, fine), referring to its small, precise steps - **Menu** — from the same French *menu*, originally meaning 'a detailed, small list' - **Diminish** — from Latin *diminuere*, an intensified form of *minuere* - **Mince** — via Old French *mincier*, to cut small, ultimately from the same Latin root
Greek *meíōn* (less) gives us the geological epoch **Miocene** (the 'less recent' epoch) and the rhetorical figure **meiosis** (deliberate understatement).
## Semantic Compression
The story of *minute* is one of semantic compression: a phrase (*pars minuta prima*) became a technical noun (*minuta*), which shed its qualifier to stand alone as the word for 1/60 of any larger unit. What began as a description of smallness became a precise quantitative designation. The adjective branch preserved the original qualitative meaning of smallness and precision, while the noun branch transformed it into a fixed temporal quantity — a rare case where a word's two meanings point back to the same etymological moment but have travelled in divergent directions ever since.
### Modern Usage
Today English uses *minute* in at least three clearly distinct registers: the time unit (a minute late), the adjective of smallness (minute traces), and the procedural record (the minutes of the meeting). All three compress centuries of Latin scholarly transmission into a single six-letter word that most speakers treat as two or three entirely separate items of vocabulary, unaware they share a single origin in a Babylonian counting system.