The English word 'north' traces a direct line from Old English 'norþ' through Proto-Germanic *nurþrą to a Proto-Indo-European root that reveals how ancient peoples conceptualized direction. The most widely accepted etymology connects it to the PIE root *h₁ner-, meaning 'under,' 'below,' or 'left.' This seemingly counterintuitive connection becomes clear when we understand how Indo-European speakers oriented themselves: facing the rising sun in the east, north was to the left and conceptually 'below' or 'beneath.'
This sun-facing orientation system left deep marks across multiple language families. In Sanskrit, the word for south is 'dakṣiṇa,' which also means 'right' — because when facing east, south is to the right hand. The Irish word for south, 'deas,' likewise means 'right.' The fact that 'north' preserves a PIE root meaning 'left/under' confirms that English inherited this same directional logic, even though the metaphorical connection has been entirely forgotten by modern speakers
Within the Germanic family, the cognates are remarkably consistent: German 'Nord,' Dutch 'noord,' Old Norse 'norðr,' Old Frisian 'north,' and Gothic (unattested but reconstructed as *naurþr). The word was borrowed from Germanic into the Romance languages — French 'nord,' Italian 'nord,' Spanish 'norte' — since Latin used 'septentriō' (from the seven stars of the Big Dipper) for the direction, a term that survived in learned usage but lost out to the more practical Germanic borrowing in everyday speech.
The Greek cognate 'nérteros,' meaning 'lower' or 'infernal' (as in the underworld), provides important corroboration for the 'under/below' semantics of the PIE root. The Oscan form 'nertrak' (left, sinister) further confirms the 'left-hand' meaning. Together, these cognates paint a consistent picture: PIE *h₁ner- meant something like 'the lower/left side,' and its application to the compass direction reflects the east-facing orientation of the proto-speakers.
The word 'north' generated an enormous family of English derivatives and place-names. 'Norway' comes from Old Norse 'Norvegr' (north way), describing the coastal sailing route. 'Norse' and 'Norman' both derive from forms meaning 'north-man' or 'north-person.' The county of Norfolk is 'north folk' (as opposed to Suffolk, '
The compound 'northern' preserves the Old English adjectival form 'norþerne,' while 'northward' (OE 'norþweard') uses the ancient directional suffix '-ward' meaning 'toward.' The word 'arctic' — though unrelated to 'north' etymologically — has become its conceptual partner; 'arctic' comes from Greek 'arktikós' (near the bear), referring to the constellation Ursa Major, which circles the North Star.
The North Star itself, Polaris, has served as the physical anchor for the concept of 'north' since antiquity. But the association between the word 'north' and the celestial pole is a cultural development, not an etymological one. The word's deep origin in *h₁ner- connects it not to stars but to the human body oriented toward the sunrise — a reminder that our most basic spatial vocabulary was born from the experience of standing on the earth, facing the light, and naming what lay to each side.