## The PIE Root *mūs-
The English word *mouse* descends from Proto-Indo-European **mūs-*, a root reconstructed with high confidence thanks to an extraordinary density of cognates across nearly every branch of the family. Old English *mūs* (plural *mȳs*) continues Proto-Germanic **mūs*, which in turn reflects the PIE form with almost no phonological alteration. This is not the norm. Most words undergo substantial sound changes over six millennia, but *mūs-* has proven stubbornly resistant to drift.
## A Word That Barely Changed
Compare the reflexes: Latin *mūs*, Ancient Greek *mûs* (μῦς), Sanskrit *mūṣ-*, Old Church Slavonic *myšь*, Armenian *mukn*, Albanian *mi*. The core shape — a long *ū* vowel flanked by *m* and *s* — persists across branches that diverged thousands of years ago. Even where regular sound laws have altered the consonants (the palatalisation in Slavic, the nasal development in Armenian), the word remains instantly recognisable. Linguists point to *mūs-* as one of the tightest cognate
Why such stability? The mouse is a creature that has lived alongside humans since the earliest agricultural settlements. It is small, ubiquitous, and culturally salient — the kind of referent that never falls out of daily vocabulary. Words for common, concrete, emotionally charged things tend to resist replacement. Nobody needed a euphemism for the mouse, and no prestige language supplied a fashionable substitute. The word simply endured
## Muscle and Mussel: The Mouse Beneath the Skin
Latin *mūs* did more than name the rodent. Latin *musculus*, literally "little mouse," gave English two seemingly unrelated words: *muscle* and *mussel*. The connection to *muscle* is vivid — the Romans saw a flexed bicep and thought of a small mouse running beneath the skin. The same metaphor arose independently in Greek, where *mûs* meant both "mouse" and "muscle." This is not a coincidence of translation but a shared cultural perception, possibly inherited from the proto-language itself.
The shellfish *mussel* also derives from *musculus*, probably through a perceived resemblance between the bivalve's shape and a small mouse. The semantic chain — rodent to diminutive to flexing tissue to shellfish — shows how a single stable root can radiate outward through metaphor while the core meaning holds firm.
## The Computer Mouse
In 1964, Douglas Engelbart and Bill English at Stanford Research Institute built a wooden pointing device with a cord trailing from one end. The cord looked like a tail, and the device fit in the palm like a small animal. They called it a mouse. This extension is a textbook case of semantic broadening through visual metaphor — the same cognitive process that gave the Romans *musculus*. The word's newest meaning is barely sixty years old, yet it follows the same analogical logic that has operated for millennia.
As physical mice give way to trackpads and gesture control, the computing sense may eventually become archaic. If it does, the rodent sense will carry on, as it has since the Neolithic.
## What Deep Stability Reveals
The survival of *mūs-* across six thousand years of linguistic change tells us something important about how languages evolve. Change is not uniform. High-frequency words for everyday referents are replaced at far lower rates than low-frequency or culturally contingent vocabulary. Statistical studies of basic vocabulary decay — notably those by Mark Pagel and colleagues using phylogenetic methods — have confirmed that words like *mouse*, *water*, and *I* have half-lives measured in tens of thousands of years, while words for less stable concepts turn over in centuries.
This does not mean *mūs-* is immortal. Sound change continues to operate on it (Modern German *Maus* with its diphthong, Russian *mysh'* with its palatalised final consonant), and eventually some branch will replace it with an innovation. But its persistence so far — through migrations, conquests, technological revolutions, and the rise and fall of empires — makes it one of the oldest continuously spoken words in any living language. When you say *mouse*, you are pronouncing something very close to what a speaker on the Pontic steppe said six thousand years ago, pointing