Pilot traces back to an unexpected source: the human foot. Ancient Greek pedon meant a rudder or steering oar, derived from pous (foot), because early Mediterranean ships used rudders controlled by the helmsman's feet. Medieval Greek formed pedotes — the person who works the rudder — and this entered Italian as pedota, meaning a harbor guide who steered visiting ships through dangerous coastal waters.
Somewhere in 15th-century Italian, pedota transformed into pilota. Linguists debate the exact mechanism — some suggest contamination from another word, possibly related to compass readings. Whatever the cause, the new form stuck and spread. French borrowed it as pilote in the 16th century, and English adopted it almost immediately as pilot.
For three centuries, a pilot was exclusively a maritime figure. Harbor pilots were essential specialists who knew local currents, sandbars, and rocks. Mark Twain took his pen name from the riverboat pilot's depth call — mark twain meant two fathoms. The profession carried real prestige and required years of apprenticeship.
The Wright brothers changed everything. After 1903, pilot rapidly acquired its aeronautical meaning, and within decades the aviation sense dominated common usage. The maritime meaning survives in harbor pilotage, where local experts still board incoming ships to guide them safely to dock.
Pilot also developed a figurative meaning: a trial run or test version. Pilot programs, pilot episodes, and pilot studies all borrow the navigational metaphor — someone steering cautiously through unknown territory before committing to the full voyage. This sense emerged in the mid-20th century and now rivals the aviation meaning in everyday business language. The word has traveled remarkably far from a Greek helmsman working a rudder with his bare feet.