## New
**Origin:** Proto-Indo-European *\*néwos*, "new"
The word *new* has been in continuous use since before any Indo-European language was written down. Its ancestor, PIE *\*néwos*, is reconstructed from cognates spread across every branch of the family — from the westernmost Celtic tongues to the easternmost Indo-Iranian ones, with the oldest written attestation coming from Hittite *newa-*, recorded in cuneiform tablets from Anatolia around 1700–1200 BCE.
The root may be connected to PIE *\*nu*, meaning "now" — suggesting that *new* originally meant something closer to "of the present moment" or "of right now." If so, the word carries a hidden timestamp: the new thing is the thing that belongs to this instant, not to the past.
The spread of *\*néwos* across the Indo-European world follows the movement of peoples, trade routes, and conquests:
- **Sanskrit** *náva* — carried into the Indian subcontinent with the Vedic migrations c. 1500 BCE - **Greek** *neos* — the basis of the productive prefix *neo-* - **Latin** *novus* — carried by Roman legions and administration across Europe - **Gothic** *niujis* — the oldest attested Germanic form - **Old English** *nīwe* — the direct ancestor of modern *new* - **Lithuanian** *naujas* — Baltic languages are considered among the most conservative in the family - **Welsh** *newydd* — the Celtic branch preserves the root with a characteristic suffix - **Russian** *novyj* — Slavic, via the same PIE source - **Armenian** *nor* — showing the regular sound changes of that branch - **Hittite** *newa-* — the oldest written Indo-European attestation of the root
This distribution is not coincidental. Basic descriptive adjectives — *new*, *old*, *big*, *small*, *long*, *warm* — belong to the most resistant layer of vocabulary in any language. They are learned early, used constantly, and rarely replaced by borrowing.
### Three English Forms, One Root
English inherited the root *\*néwos* three times, through three different historical channels, producing three distinct form-families:
**1. *New* (Germanic inheritance)** The direct line: PIE *\*néwos* → Proto-Germanic *\*niwjaz* → Old English *nīwe* → Modern English *new*. This is the native strand, unchanged in meaning for at least three thousand years.
**2. *Neo-* (from Greek *neos*)** Greek *neos* entered English via Latin scholarly and scientific vocabulary. The prefix *neo-* now generates words freely: *neophyte* (a new plant, then a new convert), *neologism* (a new word), *neonatal* (of the newborn), *neoclassical*, *neoconservative*.
The element **neon** belongs here. When William Ramsay and Morris Travers isolated it in 1898, it was the latest in a series of newly discovered noble gases. Ramsay chose the Greek neuter form *neon* — "the new one" — because it was, simply, the newest. The glowing discharge tubes that followed turned the word into a synonym for a particular colour of light.
**3. *Nov-* (from Latin *novus*)** Latin *novus* entered English through French and scholarly borrowing, producing a dense cluster: - *novel* — a new kind of narrative form, then the word for the form itself - *novice* — one who is new to a practice - *innovate* — to bring in something new (*in-* + *novare*) - *renovate* — to make new again (*re-* + *novare*) - *nova* — an astronomical term for a star that suddenly brightens, appearing "new" in the sky
### November Is Not "New Month"
The resemblance of *November* to *novus* is a false friend. *November* comes from Latin *novem*, nine, because in the original Roman calendar it was the ninth month. *Novem* and *novus* are etymologically separate words; the similarity is coincidental.
*Nova*, however, is genuine. When astronomers observed stars that seemed to appear suddenly in the sky, they called them *nova stella* — new stars.
The near-universal preservation of *\*néwos* across the Indo-European branches is itself linguistically significant. Words this stable resist replacement because they fill a cognitive slot too central to leave vacant. Every culture needs to distinguish the new from the old. The fact that Sanskrit, Hittite, Welsh, and Russian all use reflexes of the same root — after four thousand