The English word 'select' entered the language in the 1560s, borrowed directly from Latin 'selectus,' the past participle of 'seligere.' This Latin verb is a compound of two elements: the prefix 'se-' (meaning 'apart' or 'aside') and the verb 'legere' (meaning 'to gather, choose, or read'). The literal sense is therefore 'to gather apart' — to separate chosen items from a larger group.
The Latin verb 'legere' is one of the most remarkably productive roots in the history of English vocabulary. Its original meaning in Proto-Italic was 'to gather' in the most physical sense — picking fruit, harvesting crops, collecting objects from the ground. From this concrete act of gathering, the word developed two metaphorical extensions that would each generate enormous families of English words. The first extension was 'to choose' (gathering implies discrimination
Through various Latin prefixes, 'legere' produced a constellation of English words that are all, at root, about different kinds of gathering. 'Select' (se- + legere) means to gather apart. 'Collect' (com- + legere) means to gather together. 'Elect' (ex- + legere) means to gather out, to pick out by vote. 'Intellect' (inter- + legere) means to gather between, to discern or understand — literally to pick meaning from between the lines. 'Neglect' (nec- + legere) means to not gather, to fail to pick up what one should.
The 'reading' branch of 'legere' produced its own family. 'Lecture' is literally 'a reading.' 'Legend' originally meant 'something to be read' (specifically, the life of a saint read aloud in monasteries). 'Legible' means 'able to be read.' Even 'lesson' descends from 'lectio,' a reading.
The PIE root behind all of this is *leǵ-, meaning 'to collect' or 'to gather.' This root also entered Greek as 'legein' (to say, to speak — from the sense of 'gathering' words) and produced 'logos' (word, reason, logic), 'dialogue,' 'catalogue,' 'prologue,' and 'epilogue.' The semantic journey from 'gathering sticks' to 'logic' and 'dialogue' is one of the most extraordinary in all of etymology.
In English usage, 'select' has always carried connotations of care and discrimination that distinguish it from simpler synonyms like 'choose' or 'pick.' To select implies evaluating options and making a considered judgment. This nuance was present from the word's first appearances in English and reflects the Latin prefix 'se-' (apart) — selection is not just choosing but choosing with separation, setting the chosen thing apart from the unchosen.
The adjective use of 'select' (as in 'a select group' or 'select committee') emerged in the early seventeenth century, emphasizing exclusivity and quality. This adjectival sense has persisted strongly, giving rise to compounds like 'select committee' (first attested 1670s in parliamentary usage) and the modern 'selection' (from Latin 'selectio,' the act of choosing).
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, 'select' acquired new technical meanings in computing (the SQL SELECT statement, dropdown select menus) and genetics (natural selection, selective breeding), extending the ancient Latin concept of discriminating choice into domains its Roman coiners could never have imagined. Yet the core meaning remains remarkably stable: to gather apart, to separate the chosen from the unchosen, to exercise judgment in picking from among alternatives.