The English word 'particular' arrived in the fourteenth century from Old French 'particulier,' from Late Latin 'particulāris,' meaning 'of or pertaining to a small part.' The Latin adjective derives from 'particula,' the diminutive of 'pars' (part, share, portion), meaning literally 'a little part' or 'a tiny piece.' The deeper root is PIE *perh₂-, meaning 'to grant' or 'to allot,' which also gave Latin 'portio' (portion) and 'parcere' (to spare).
The word's intellectual history is inseparable from the tradition of Aristotelian logic, which entered medieval Europe through Latin translations of Aristotle's 'Organon.' In Aristotelian syllogistic, propositions are classified by quantity as either 'universal' (about all members of a class: 'all humans are mortal') or 'particular' (about some members: 'some humans are wise'). Latin translators rendered Aristotle's Greek 'en merei' (in part) as 'particulāris,' and 'katholou' (of the whole) as 'ūniversālis.' These Latin terms became the technical vocabulary of scholastic philosophy and, through it, of European intellectual life
The opposition between 'particular' and 'general' (or 'universal') became one of the foundational structures of Western thought. The medieval Problem of Universals — whether general categories like 'redness' or 'humanity' exist independently of particular red things or individual humans — consumed centuries of philosophical debate. Realists (following Plato) held that universals have independent existence; nominalists (following Ockham) held that only particulars exist and universals are mere names. This debate shaped not only philosophy
In ordinary English usage, 'particular' developed several senses beyond the logical. The meaning 'noteworthy' or 'special' (as in 'nothing in particular' or 'a particular friend') emerged in the fifteenth century, from the idea that something singled out from the general mass deserves special attention. The meaning 'fastidious' or 'exacting' (as in 'she's very particular about her food') developed in the sixteenth century, from the idea of attending to individual details rather than accepting things in general.
The noun use — 'the particulars of a case,' meaning the individual details — dates from the fifteenth century and became a standard legal and administrative term. A 'bill of particulars' itemizes specific charges or claims, breaking a general accusation into its constituent parts. This legal usage preserves the word's etymological core with precision: 'particulars' are the small parts into which a larger whole is divided.
The Latin root 'pars' generated one of the largest word families in English. 'Part' itself came through Old French. 'Partial' (of a part, incomplete, or biased toward one part). 'Partition' (a division into parts). 'Partner' (one who shares a part, from Anglo-French 'parcener'). 'Participate' (to take part, from Latin 'participāre'). 'Department' (a separated part, from French 'département'). 'Impart' (to give a part of). 'Apart' (to one side, separated). 'Compartment' (a division into parts). 'Particle' (a tiny part) — which shares with 'particular' the diminutive suffix '-cula.'
In science, 'particular' gave way to 'particle' as the preferred term for the smallest units of matter. But 'particular' retained its philosophical importance. Leibniz proposed that the universe consists of 'particular' substances called monads. Hegel's dialectic moves from the universal through the particular to the individual. In modern analytic philosophy, 'particulars' (individual objects and events) are contrasted with 'universals' (properties and relations), continuing a conversation that began with Aristotle's
The casual modern use of 'particular' — 'no particular reason,' 'this particular problem,' 'in particular' — has drifted far from the word's scholastic origins. Yet even in everyday speech, the word retains its core function: it singles out, it specifies, it draws the listener's attention from the general to the specific, from the whole to the part, from the universal to the individual instance.