The adjective 'opaque' entered English in the fifteenth century from French 'opaque,' itself from Latin 'opacus' (shaded, dark, not transparent). The ultimate origin of the Latin word is uncertain — it may relate to a root meaning 'to shade' or 'to cover,' but no secure Proto-Indo-European etymology has been established. This makes 'opaque' one of those words whose own origins are, fittingly, somewhat opaque.
The physical sense is the primary one: an opaque material does not allow light to pass through it. Metals, wood, stone, and most plastics are opaque. The property of opacity is the inverse of transparency — where a transparent material allows light to pass undistorted, and a translucent material scatters it, an opaque material absorbs or reflects it entirely. In physics, opacity is measured as the fraction of light that fails to pass through
Virgil used 'opacus' frequently in the Aeneid, particularly to describe the dense shade of forests. 'Opaca nemora' (shaded groves) was a stock phrase — woods so thick with canopy that sunlight could not penetrate. The Latin word carried associations of coolness, mystery, and concealment. Shaded places were refuges from the Mediterranean
The figurative sense developed naturally. If physical opacity blocks light, intellectual opacity blocks understanding. An 'opaque' text is one you cannot see through to its meaning. An 'opaque' bureaucracy is one whose workings are hidden from view. An 'opaque' financial instrument is one whose risks cannot be readily
In art, opacity and transparency are fundamental properties of pigments and media. Opaque pigments cover the surface beneath them completely — titanium white, cadmium red, and cerulean blue are highly opaque. Transparent pigments allow underlying layers to show through — alizarin crimson, ultramarine, and viridian are transparent. Painters have exploited
In computing, 'opacity' took on precise technical meaning with the development of digital graphics. The alpha channel, introduced in the late 1970s, stores a transparency value for each pixel in a digital image. An alpha value of 1 means fully opaque; 0 means fully transparent; values between represent partial transparency. CSS opacity, used in web design, follows the same convention. The word 'opaque' thus migrated
The noun 'opacity' entered English slightly later than the adjective and has developed rich figurative uses. Corporate opacity, governmental opacity, financial opacity — in each case, the word implies that something is being concealed, whether deliberately or through structural complexity. Calls for 'transparency' in governance and business are, etymologically, calls for the opposite of opacity: let light through so people can see what is happening.
The word sits in a precise semantic field with 'translucent' and 'transparent.' All three derive from Latin, and together they describe a complete spectrum of light transmission: opaque (no light passes), translucent (light passes but is scattered), transparent (light passes clearly). That English has three distinct Latin-derived terms for degrees of light-blockage reflects the importance of visibility — both physical and metaphorical — to the cultures that built the language.