The word 'parasite' entered English in the 1530s from Latin 'parasitus,' from Greek 'parasitos,' a compound of 'para-' (beside, alongside) and 'sitos' (food, grain, wheat). The literal meaning is 'one who eats beside another' — a fellow diner, a table companion. But in Greek usage, the word had acquired a sharply negative connotation: a 'parasitos' was not an invited guest but a hanger-on, a professional flatterer who secured meals at wealthy men's tables through obsequiousness, wit, or sheer persistence.
The parasitos was a recognized social type in ancient Athens and a stock character in Greek New Comedy. In the plays of Menander and his Roman adaptors Plautus and Terence, the parasite appears as a comic figure — hungry, shameless, and resourceful, willing to endure insults and humiliation in exchange for food. The character type reflected a real social phenomenon: in a culture where lavish dining was a marker of status, and where reciprocal hospitality was a social obligation, there were always individuals who exploited the system — who ate without contributing, who flattered without sincerity.
The word entered Latin as 'parasitus' with this social meaning intact, and English initially borrowed it in the same sense. Early English uses of 'parasite' refer to human sycophants and freeloaders, not to biological organisms. Shakespeare does not use the word, but Ben Jonson and other early modern writers employ it in its Greek social sense — the flatterer, the toady, the one who feeds off another's generosity.
The biological meaning — an organism that derives nutrients from a living host at the host's expense — emerged in the seventeenth century as natural historians began to systematically describe the relationships between organisms. The metaphorical transfer was intuitive: a tapeworm does to a human body exactly what the Greek parasitos did to a wealthy Athenian's dinner table. Both feed without contributing; both exploit a relationship of proximity; both cause their host to lose resources. The scientific term thus preserves, in fossilized form, an ancient
The Greek root 'sitos' (food, grain) appears in several other English words, though they are less common. 'Sitophobia' is a pathological fear of food. 'Sitology' is the study of nutrition. The prefix 'para-' (beside) is far more productive: 'parallel' (beside one another), 'paragraph' (written beside), 'paradox' (beside/contrary to opinion), 'parachute' (protection against falling). In 'parasite,' the 'beside' has a spatial specificity — the parasite sits beside the food source, literally adjacent to the meal
Modern parasitology has revealed that parasitism is one of the most successful ecological strategies on Earth. By some estimates, parasitic species outnumber free-living species. Parasites have evolved independently in virtually every major animal phylum, and many host species carry multiple parasitic species simultaneously. The word coined by Greek
Bong Joon-ho's 2019 film 'Parasite,' which won the Palme d'Or and the Academy Award for Best Picture, restored the word's original social dimension. The film's central metaphor — a poor family infiltrating and feeding off a wealthy household — recapitulates precisely the Greek meaning of 'parasitos': the uninvited guest who eats at another's table. The biological and social meanings, which had diverged over centuries, converged again in a single title.