The word 'phrase' arrived in English from the world of classical rhetoric, where it meant something quite different from what grammar teachers mean by it today. Its journey from Greek 'manner of expression' to English 'group of words' reveals how a rhetorical concept was gradually reanalyzed into a grammatical one.
English borrowed 'phrase' in the 1520s from Latin 'phrasis,' which had been borrowed from Greek 'phrásis' (φράσις). The Greek noun derived from the verb 'phrázein' (φράζειν), meaning 'to point out, to declare, to tell.' In Homer, 'phrázein' often means 'to indicate' or 'to consider,' with a concrete sense of pointing something out for attention. By the classical period, the noun 'phrásis' had settled into the meaning 'way of speaking
The deeper etymology of 'phrázein' is debated. Some linguists connect it to Proto-Indo-European *bʰreh₂ǵ- ('to indicate, to point out'), but this reconstruction is not universally accepted. The word has no widely agreed cognates outside Greek, making it one of those Greek terms whose roots remain partially obscured.
When Latin borrowed 'phrasis,' it retained the Greek sense of 'diction' or 'style of speech.' Renaissance humanists used it frequently when discussing literary style, and it entered English in this rhetorical context. Early English uses of 'phrase' from the 1520s through the early 1600s almost always mean 'manner of expression' — one might speak of 'an elegant phrase' or 'a rude phrase,' describing the quality of someone's verbal style rather than identifying a particular word-group.
The grammatical sense of 'phrase' — a meaningful unit of words smaller than a clause — developed in English during the 17th century, as grammarians began systematically analyzing English sentence structure. By the 1660s, 'phrase' was being used in grammar books to describe units like 'the old man' (noun phrase) or 'very quickly' (adverb phrase). This grammatical meaning eventually became the word's primary sense in English, though the rhetorical meaning survives in expressions like 'to coin a phrase' and 'turn of phrase.'
Interestingly, the grammatical narrowing that occurred in English did not happen in all languages that borrowed the word. In French, 'phrase' means a complete sentence, not merely a word-group — a significant difference that causes persistent confusion for learners moving between the two languages. German similarly uses 'Phrase' to mean 'sentence' in grammatical contexts, though it also carries the connotation of 'empty rhetoric' or 'cliché,' as in the expression 'Phrasendrescherei' ('phrase-threshing,' meaning 'spouting empty platitudes'). In these languages, the
The word 'phrase' generated a productive family of derivatives in English. 'Paraphrase' (from Greek 'paráphrase,' 'a saying in other words') entered English in the 1540s, meaning to restate something in different words. 'Periphrasis' (from Greek 'períphrasis,' 'a roundabout expression') arrived around the same time, denoting the use of many words where fewer would do. 'Phraseology,' meaning a set of characteristic expressions or a style of expression, appeared in the 1660s. 'Rephrase,' a straightforward English formation, is much newer
In music, 'phrase' acquired a specialized meaning in the 18th century: a musical passage forming a roughly complete unit of melody, analogous to a sentence in speech. Musical phrasing — the art of shaping these melodic units expressively — became a central concept in performance practice. The analogy between linguistic and musical phrasing is ancient; Greek rhetorical theory influenced early ideas about musical form, and the transfer of 'phrase' from speech to music was a natural extension.
The verb 'to phrase,' meaning 'to express in words' or 'to divide into phrases,' appeared in English by the 1560s. In music, 'to phrase' means to perform with attention to the shape and breathing of melodic lines. Both verbal and musical uses emphasize the idea of articulation — making meaning clear through grouping and emphasis — which connects back to the original Greek sense of 'phrázein' as pointing something out.
Today, 'phrase' occupies a central place in both everyday English and technical linguistics. In generative grammar, the 'phrase structure' of a sentence — its hierarchical organization into noun phrases, verb phrases, and other units — is considered one of the fundamental properties of human language. The humble word that Greek rhetoricians used to talk about speaking style has become a cornerstone of modern syntactic theory.