## Night
**From PIE *nókʷts — a word older than writing**
Few words in English carry the weight of *night*. It descends from Proto-Indo-European *\*nókʷts*, a form reconstructed with confidence because it survives, nearly intact, in every major branch of the family — including Hittite, the oldest attested Indo-European language, where it appears as *nekuz*. When a word persists across five thousand years and a dozen language families, it tells you something about the concept it names: night is not optional knowledge.
The breadth of the family is the argument. Sanskrit gives us *nákti* and *náktam*; Greek, *nyx* (genitive *nyktos*); Latin, *nox* (genitive *noctis*); Lithuanian, *naktis*; Old Church Slavonic, *nošti*; Russian, *noch'*; Irish, *nocht*; Welsh, *nos*; Gothic, *nahts*; Old English, *niht*; German, *Nacht*. From the steppes to the Atlantic fringe, from the Vedic hymns to the Old English elegies, the same root names the same darkness.
This is comparative linguistics in its most direct form: lay the forms beside each other and the kinship is audible. The consonant cluster shifts, the vowels drift, but the skeleton holds.
### Grimm's Law Makes It Visible
The apparent gap between Latin *nox* and English *night* closes the moment you apply Grimm's Law, the systematic consonant shift that separates Germanic from the rest of the family. Proto-Indo-European *\*k* became Germanic *\*h* — so the *\*kʷ* in *\*nókʷts* surfaces in Latin as the *c* of *noctis* and in English as the *gh* of *night* (originally pronounced as a velar fricative, the sound still preserved in Scottish *loch*). The vowel shift follows its own path; the consonant correspondence is the diagnostic.
This is precisely what Grimm demonstrated: Germanic is not a degraded form of Latin, nor a borrowing from it. The two are cousins, and the shifts are not random corruptions but regular laws. Once you have the law, *nox* and *night* are transparently the same word wearing different coats.
### Two Routes from the Same Root
English inherited *night* directly through the Germanic line, unbroken from Old English *niht*. But Latin *nox* arrived later, through the scholarly and ecclesiastical vocabulary that flooded English after the Norman Conquest and the Renaissance. This gives English a double inheritance from the same PIE root:
- **Inherited:** *night*, *fortnight*, *nightingale*, *nightmare* - **Borrowed from Latin:** *nocturnal*, *nocturne*, *noctiluca*, *equinox*, *noctuid*
The split is not accidental. The inherited forms cluster around lived experience — the darkness you sleep through, the owl that hunts in it, the fear that visits in it. The Latin borrowings cluster around technical and artistic registers: the nocturne is a musical form, *equinox* is astronomical terminology, *noctiluca* is a biological genus. The root is the same; the register of the two channels diverges by a thousand years
### Fortnight: A Compressed Reckoning
*Fortnight* is a compression of Old English *fēowertyne niht* — fourteen nights. The Germanic habit of counting by nights rather than days was noted by Tacitus in the first century CE, who observed that the Germanic tribes reckoned time by nights. The practice appears in Old English law, in calendar reckoning, and in the survival of *fortnight* itself, which remains in everyday British English while American English largely abandoned it. The word is a fossil: it preserves an archaic counting system
Basic time-concepts — day, night, sun, moon, year — belong to the most stable layer of any lexicon. They are acquired in infancy, used daily, and rarely displaced by borrowing because there is no prestige motive to replace them. A community might borrow the word for a new technology, a trade good, or a foreign institution; it does not borrow the word for darkness. This is why the core vocabulary of the IE family — body parts
*Night* has no competitors. Every Indo-European community that has ever existed has needed a word for it, and nearly all of them kept the ancestral one. The result is a word that functions as a landmark: when you find *nox*, *nacht*, *nuit*, and *night* in the same sentence, you are seeing the shape of the entire family from above.