The word 'nutrition' entered English in the early fifteenth century from Late Latin 'nūtrītiōnem,' the accusative of 'nūtrītiō' (a feeding, nourishing), derived from the past participle stem of the Latin verb 'nūtrīre' (to nourish, to suckle, to feed, to foster). The Latin verb is generally traced to the PIE root *(s)neh₂- (to flow, to swim), with the semantic development passing through the idea of flowing milk — the primal nourishment.
The PIE root *(s)neh₂- produced a cluster of words across the Indo-European family connected to flowing and swimming. Greek 'néō' (νέω, to swim) and 'naûs' (ναῦς, ship — something that navigates flowing water) may be related, though the connection to Latin 'nūtrīre' involves a specifically Latin semantic development from 'flowing' to 'giving suck' to 'nourishing.' Some etymologists prefer to derive 'nūtrīre' from a separate root *nū- related to nursing, acknowledging that the connection to *(s)neh₂- is not universally accepted.
Within Latin, 'nūtrīre' generated a substantial vocabulary. 'Nūtrīx' (nurse, wet-nurse), 'nūtrīmentum' (nourishment), 'nūtrītīvus' (nourishing), and 'nūtrītūra' (nourishing, nursing) all descend from this verb. Through Old French, Latin 'nūtrīre' also gave English 'nourish' (from Old French 'noriss-,' the stem of 'norir,' from Latin 'nūtrīre'), 'nurse' (from Old French 'norrice,' from Late Latin 'nūtrīcia,' a form of 'nūtrīx'), and 'nurture' (from Old French 'noreture,' from Late Latin 'nūtrītūra'). These four English
In its earliest English uses, 'nutrition' referred simply to the act or process of nourishing the body. It was a learned borrowing, found primarily in medical and philosophical texts. The fifteenth-century usage reflects medieval Galenic medicine, in which nutrition was understood as one of the body's fundamental processes — the conversion of food into flesh and blood through the action of the 'natural faculty.'
The development of 'nutrition' into a scientific discipline began in the eighteenth century with Antoine Lavoisier's chemical studies of metabolism (1770s–1780s), which showed that respiration was a form of combustion and that food provided the fuel. The isolation of individual nutrients in the nineteenth century — proteins by Gerardus Johannes Mulder (1838), vitamins by Casimir Funk and others (1910s–1920s) — transformed nutrition from a general concept into a quantitative science. The word itself shifted from describing a bodily process to naming an academic field and a category of public-health advice.
The twentieth century saw 'nutrition' enter everyday language through government dietary guidelines, food labeling (the 'Nutrition Facts' panel became mandatory on U.S. food packaging in 1994), and an expanding wellness culture. Compound forms proliferated: 'nutritionist' (a practitioner), 'nutritional' (adjective), 'malnutrition' (deficient nourishment), 'undernutrition,' 'overnutrition,' 'micronutrient,' 'macronutrient.' The adjective 'nutritious' (providing nourishment) dates to the 1660s.
The cultural trajectory of 'nutrition' in the twenty-first century reflects broader trends in the wellness industry. The word appears on product packaging, in wellness blogs, and in the marketing of supplements, superfoods, and specialized diets. 'Nutrition' has become a signifier of informed, intentional eating — distinct from mere 'food' in that it implies scientific awareness of what one consumes. This evolution from a Latin