The verb 'reduce' entered English in the late fourteenth century from Latin 'redūcere' (past participle 'reductum'), composed of the prefix 're-' (back, again) and 'dūcere' (to lead). The literal meaning is 'to lead back' — to bring something back to a former state, to restore it to a previous or more basic condition.
The semantic journey from 'leading back' to 'making smaller' is more subtle than it might appear. The original English sense, faithful to the Latin, was 'to bring back, to restore.' One could 'reduce' a wayward person to obedience (lead them back to it), 'reduce' a dislocated joint (lead it back to its proper position), or 'reduce' a captured territory (bring it back under control). The modern primary sense — making something smaller in size, amount, or degree — emerged in the sixteenth century through
The cooking sense of 'reduce' — to boil a liquid until its volume decreases and its flavor concentrates — preserves this metaphor beautifully. A sauce is 'led back' to its essence by evaporating the water. The instruction 'reduce by half' is standard culinary vocabulary, and the resulting 'reduction' is both literally smaller and metaphorically more essential.
In chemistry, 'reduction' acquired a specific technical meaning that can confuse non-chemists. A chemical reduction is the gain of electrons by a substance — the opposite of oxidation. The term originated in metallurgy, where 'reducing' a metal ore meant extracting the pure metal from its oxide: the metal was 'led back' from its compound state to its elemental form. When chemistry formalized redox reactions in terms of electron transfer, the metallurgical term was retained even though reduction (electron gain) often increases the mass
The military sense of 'reduce' — to capture a fortification or bring a territory under control — was common from the sixteenth through nineteenth centuries. To 'reduce' a fortress was to 'lead it back' under one's authority, typically by siege. This usage has faded from everyday English but persists in military histories.
The philosophical concept of 'reductionism' — the principle of explaining complex phenomena in terms of simpler, more fundamental ones — takes its name from the idea of 'leading back' complex observations to basic laws. Reductionism in science means leading phenomena back to their underlying causes; in philosophy, it means leading mental states back to physical processes, or ethical principles back to natural facts. The word 'irreducible' marks the point where this leading-back reaches bedrock: an irreducible minimum cannot be simplified further.
The Latin adjective 'redux' (led back, returned) entered English as a literary and somewhat archaic term, most famously in the title of John Updike's novel 'Rabbit Redux' (1971) and in the phrase 'Apocalypse Now Redux.' The word signals a return — something or someone 'led back' to a previous state or place.
In mathematics, 'reduce' means to simplify an expression to its lowest or most basic form: reducing a fraction (6/8 to 3/4), reducing an equation. This sense aligns perfectly with the etymological meaning of leading something back to its simplest state.
Phonologically, 'reduce' is stressed on the second syllable: /ɹɪˈdjuːs/. The Latin prefix 're-' reduces to /ɹɪ-/ in unstressed position, a regular pattern in English. The /djuːs/ ending preserves the Latin 'dūc-' stem, with the English palatalization of /d/ before /juː/ in many dialects producing the affricate /dʒuːs/.