The word 'piano' is one of the most successful truncations in the history of musical terminology. It began life as half of the Italian compound 'pianoforte,' a name that described the revolutionary capability of a new keyboard instrument: the ability to play both softly (piano) and loudly (forte) depending on how the player struck the keys.
The instrument's story begins in Florence around 1700, when Bartolomeo Cristofori, a harpsichord maker in the employ of Grand Prince Ferdinando de' Medici, devised a keyboard mechanism that used hammers rather than quills to set strings vibrating. The harpsichord, dominant for two centuries, plucked its strings mechanically — producing a bright but dynamically rigid tone. Cristofori's hammer mechanism allowed the player's finger pressure to control volume, a seemingly simple innovation that would ultimately reshape Western music. He called his creation
The Italian word 'piano' meaning 'soft' or 'quiet' derives from Latin 'plānus,' which meant 'flat,' 'level,' or 'smooth.' The semantic shift from 'flat' to 'soft' occurred within Italian: something flat or even is gentle, not abrupt — and hence quiet. 'Forte' comes from Latin 'fortis' (strong, powerful). Together, 'pianoforte'
The compound 'pianoforte' entered English by the 1760s, appearing in Charles Burney's musical writings and other sources. But the full word was cumbersome, and by the early nineteenth century English speakers had shortened it to 'piano.' The Oxford English Dictionary records the abbreviated form from 1803. Curiously, English chose to keep the 'soft' half of the name
German took a different approach entirely. Rather than borrowing the Italian name, German adopted 'Klavier' (from Latin 'clavis,' meaning 'key'), a word that originally referred to any keyboard instrument and gradually narrowed to mean specifically the piano. French borrowed 'piano' directly from Italian, as did Spanish, Portuguese, and most other European languages.
The Latin root 'plānus' that underlies 'piano' is itself productive in English, though few English speakers would connect 'piano' to words like 'plain,' 'plane,' 'explain' (literally 'to flatten out'), and 'plan' (originally a flat drawing). All descend from the same Latin adjective, which traces further back to Proto-Indo-European *pleh₂- (flat, broad), the same root that produced Greek 'platús' (broad, flat) — source of English 'plate,' 'plateau,' and 'platypus' (literally 'flat-footed').
The musical term 'piano' as a dynamic marking (meaning 'play softly,' abbreviated 'p') predates the instrument by over a century, appearing in Italian musical scores from the late sixteenth century. When Cristofori named his invention, he was using an existing musical vocabulary word, not coining a new one.
Cristofori built approximately twenty pianos in his lifetime, of which three survive — in museums in Rome, Leipzig, and New York. The instrument evolved dramatically through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, growing from five octaves to the modern standard of eighty-eight keys, gaining an iron frame to withstand higher string tensions, and developing the sustain pedal mechanism. Through all these transformations, the name stuck: piano, the quiet one, even as concert grands became capable of filling halls with thunderous sound.