The English word 'pendulum' entered the language around 1660, from New Latin 'pendulum,' itself a substantive use of the neuter form of Latin 'pendulus' (hanging, swinging, pendulous). The adjective 'pendulus' derives from 'pendere' (to hang), and the word was coined or adapted by seventeenth-century scientists who needed a precise term for the swinging weight they were studying with such intensity.
The pendulum's scientific history begins with Galileo Galilei in the 1580s. According to tradition (possibly apocryphal), young Galileo observed a chandelier swinging in the Cathedral of Pisa and noticed that its period of oscillation remained constant regardless of amplitude — a property called isochronism. Whether the cathedral story is true or not, Galileo did study pendular motion extensively and recognized that a pendulum of a given length keeps remarkably constant time. He proposed, late in life, that this property could be used to regulate
The Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens succeeded where Galileo had only theorized. In 1656, Huygens invented the pendulum clock — the first clock accurate enough to measure seconds reliably. His design used a pendulum as the timekeeping element, and it transformed both horology and science. For the next 270 years, until the advent of quartz and atomic clocks in the twentieth century, pendulum clocks were the most accurate timekeeping devices in the world.
The word 'pendulum' arrived in English almost immediately after Huygens's invention. Scientists needed a name for this device, and Latin provided the obvious choice: 'pendulum' — the hanging thing, the swinging thing. The word rapidly became standard in both scientific and popular usage.
In physics, the pendulum became a foundational object of study. The simple pendulum (a point mass on a massless string) is one of the first systems analyzed in classical mechanics. The compound pendulum (a rigid body swinging from a pivot) is a standard topic in advanced mechanics. Foucault's pendulum (1851) demonstrated the rotation of the Earth by showing that a freely swinging pendulum's plane of oscillation rotates relative to the floor beneath it. The ballistic pendulum, invented in the eighteenth century, measured the velocity of projectiles. The torsion pendulum twists rather than swings and is used in gravity
The metaphorical use of 'pendulum' — to describe anything that swings between extremes — became common by the eighteenth century. Political commentators speak of 'the pendulum of public opinion,' swinging from left to right and back again. Economists describe 'the pendulum of regulation,' swinging between stricter and looser oversight. The metaphor captures the periodicity and inevitability of the swing: just as a physical pendulum must return from its extreme position, so (the metaphor suggests) must political, cultural, and economic tendencies reverse course.
The adjective 'pendulous' (hanging loosely, swinging) is older than 'pendulum' in English, dating to the early seventeenth century. It comes directly from Latin 'pendulus' without the substantivization into a noun. 'Pendulous' is used for anything that hangs and sways: pendulous branches, pendulous earrings, pendulous jowls.
The word 'pendulum' thus stands at the intersection of ancient language and modern science. Its Latin root ('pendere,' to hang) is prehistoric — it belongs to the PIE family of words for stretching and drawing. But its English form is a product of the Scientific Revolution, coined in an era when Galileo, Huygens, Newton, and their contemporaries were rebuilding human understanding of motion, time, and gravity. The pendulum — the hanging, swinging weight — became a symbol of scientific precision, and the word that names it carries