The word 'own' functions in Modern English as both an adjective ('my own house') and a verb ('I own a house'), and both uses descend from the same Old English source. Understanding how a single root produced these two grammatical roles, as well as the related words 'owe' and 'ought,' reveals a remarkable story of semantic branching within a single language.
Old English 'āgen' was the past participle of the strong verb 'āgan' (to own, to possess, to have). As a past participle, 'āgen' meant 'possessed, having been taken into one's keeping,' and it was used attributively to mean 'one's own.' The verb 'āgan' itself had a rich conjugation: its past tense 'āhte' is the ancestor of Modern English 'ought,' and a weakened form of the verb produced 'owe.' Thus three modern words — own, owe, ought — are
The Proto-Germanic ancestor *aigan (to possess) is reconstructed from the cognates: Gothic 'aigan' (to have, to possess), Old Norse 'eiga' (to own, to have), Old High German 'eigan' (own, proper), and Old Saxon 'ēgan.' The adjective form *aiganaz (one's own, possessed) gave German 'eigen' (own, proper, peculiar), Dutch 'eigen,' and Swedish 'egen' — all meaning 'one's own' and used in compounds like German 'Eigentum' (property) and 'eigenartig' (peculiar, literally 'of its own kind').
The PIE root *h₂eyḱ- meant 'to possess, to be master of, to have power over.' Outside Germanic, it appears in Sanskrit 'īśe' (he possesses, he rules, he is master), 'īśvara' (lord, master, a title applied to Shiva), and Avestan 'isə' (to possess). The semantic range — from simple possession to lordship and divine sovereignty — shows how deeply the concept of ownership was tied to power in the Indo-European worldview.
The phonological development from Old English 'āgen' to Modern English 'own' involves the loss of the medial 'g' (which was pronounced as a fricative /ɣ/ in Old English) and compensatory changes to the vowel. Middle English spellings include 'owen,' 'ouen,' and 'oghen,' reflecting dialect variation in how the fricative was treated. By early Modern English, the form had stabilized as 'own' with the long vowel /oːn/, later diphthongized to /oʊn/.
The verbal use of 'own' (to own something) is a back-formation from the adjective. Old English used 'āgan' as the verb and 'āgen' as the adjective, but when the verb 'āgan' was lost in Middle English (replaced partly by 'have' and 'possess'), the adjective 'own' was redeployed as a verb. This is an unusual development — most English words go from verb to adjective, not the other way.
The semantic split between 'own,' 'owe,' and 'ought' is instructive. 'Owe' retained the sense of possession but shifted toward the idea of being obligated to give — a debt is something you 'possess' but must return. 'Ought' began as the past tense of 'owe' ('I ought' = 'I owed') and drifted from financial obligation into moral obligation. Today, 'own' means to have, 'owe' means to be indebted, and 'ought' means to be morally bound — three shades of the same ancient concept of having and being obligated by having.
The phrase 'to own up' (to confess) appeared in the 18th century, extending ownership from property to responsibility for actions. 'Disown' appeared in the 17th century. The modern slang 'to own someone' (to defeat or humiliate) dates to 1990s internet culture, adding yet another layer to a word whose history already spans five millennia.