The word 'real' has an origin that would surprise most English speakers: it was not always an everyday word meaning 'genuine' or 'actually existing.' It began as a piece of medieval philosophical jargon, coined by scholastic thinkers to solve a specific intellectual problem.
The Latin noun 'rēs' is one of the most fundamental and versatile words in the language, meaning thing, matter, affair, business, fact, property, or circumstance. It appears in countless Latin phrases that have entered English: 'rēs pūblica' (republic, the public thing), 'rēs gestae' (things done, deeds), 'in rē' (in the matter of). The word descends from Proto-Indo-European *reh₁ís, which appears to have originally meant wealth or goods — tangible possessions, the stuff of the material world.
Late Latin 'reālis' was created in the medieval period — probably in the thirteenth century — by scholastic philosophers who needed an adjective meaning 'pertaining to things (rēs) as opposed to words (nōmina).' The great medieval debate between Realists and Nominalists hinged on this distinction: Realists held that universals (like 'redness' or 'justice') had real existence independent of the mind, while Nominalists held that they were merely names (nōmina) applied to collections of individual things. 'Reālis' was the Realists' adjective, and it is from their philosophical position that we get the modern word.
The word entered English through Anglo-French 'reel' in the fifteenth century, initially retaining its philosophical flavor. Early English uses of 'real' appear in legal and scholarly contexts: 'real property' (property in things, especially land, as opposed to 'personal property') is one of the oldest surviving technical uses. The legal distinction between 'real' and 'personal' property — still fundamental in common law — preserves the medieval Latin sense of 'reālis' as 'pertaining to things.'
The broadening of 'real' from a technical term to an everyday word for 'genuine, actually existing' occurred gradually during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Shakespeare uses 'real' sparingly and always with a sense of emphasis — calling something 'real' implied that its existence was in question or dispute. By the eighteenth century, however, the word had become fully naturalized in ordinary English, available for casual assertions of genuineness ('a real friend,' 'real gold').
The philosophical richness of 'real' has made it a central term in multiple branches of thought. In metaphysics, 'realism' is the position that the external world exists independently of our perception of it. In aesthetics, 'realism' denotes art that depicts things as they actually are. In international relations, 'realism' describes the view that states act in their self-interest
The informal intensifier use of 'real' ('real nice,' 'real fast') — functioning as an adverb meaning 'very' — emerged in American English in the early nineteenth century and has been condemned by prescriptivists ever since, though it shows no sign of declining. The slang expression 'for real' (meaning 'genuinely, seriously') and the question 'Is this real?' (expressing disbelief) both exploit the word's philosophical undertones, treating the boundary between reality and illusion as a matter of daily concern.
Perhaps the most revealing derivative is 'realize,' which entered English from French 'réaliser' in the seventeenth century. Its double meaning — both 'to make real' and 'to become aware of' — captures the deep connection between reality and consciousness that has preoccupied philosophers from Descartes to the present. To realize something is simultaneously to bring it into existence and to recognize that it exists.