The English word "session" traces its origins to the Latin term "sessiō," which denotes a sitting or the act of sitting down. More specifically, "session" derives from the accusative form "sessiōnem," used in Latin to indicate a particular instance or event of sitting. This Latin noun itself comes from "sessus," the past participle of the verb "sedēre," meaning "to sit." The verb "sedēre" is inherited from the Proto-Indo-European root *sed-, which broadly means "to sit." This root is well-attested and highly productive across many Indo-European languages, giving rise to numerous cognates related to sitting, seating, and setting.
In Latin, "sedēre" functioned as a fundamental verb, and its past participle "sessus" formed the basis for nouns that described the act or state of sitting. From "sessus," the noun "sessiō" emerged, referring to a sitting, a session, or a formal meeting. The semantic development here is quite literal: a "session" was originally the period during which a group of people sat together, particularly in a formal or official capacity, such as a court or legislative assembly.
The Proto-Indo-European root *sed- is the ultimate source of "sedēre" and its derivatives. This root is reconstructed based on comparative evidence from various Indo-European languages. For example, Greek has the word "hédra" (ἕδρα), meaning "seat" or "base," which is etymologically related and has given rise to terms like "cathedral" (originally a seat or throne of a bishop) and "polyhedron" (a solid figure with many faces, metaphorically a "many-seated" shape). In the Germanic branch, Old English preserves the root in "sittan" (to sit) and "setl" (seat), which also led to the verb "to settle." The Germanic root *setjan, meaning "to set" or "to cause to sit," is another cognate reflecting the same PIE root.
The word "session" entered the English language in the 14th century, borrowed from Anglo-French, which itself had inherited the term from Latin through Old French. The Old French "session" carried the meaning of a sitting or a formal assembly, particularly in judicial or parliamentary contexts. In medieval England, the term was primarily used to denote the formal sitting of courts or parliaments, emphasizing the physical act of sitting together to conduct official business.
Over time, the meaning of "session" broadened in English. While it retained its original sense of a formal meeting or period during which a body convened, it also came to be applied more generally to any period devoted to a particular activity. For example, a "recording session" refers to a designated time during which music or sound is recorded, and a "therapy session" denotes a scheduled period for therapeutic work. Despite this semantic expansion, the underlying metaphor remains consistent: a session is fundamentally a time when individuals "sit down
It is important to distinguish the inherited Latin root from later borrowings or unrelated homonyms. The English "session" is not a borrowing from any other language family but directly descends from Latin via Old French. Its cognates in other Indo-European languages are inherited from the common PIE root *sed-, rather than being loanwords. The semantic field related to sitting and seating
In summary, "session" is a term deeply rooted in the physical act of sitting, as reflected in its Latin and Proto-Indo-European ancestry. Its journey into English through Anglo-French in the 14th century preserved this core meaning, which has since expanded metaphorically to encompass any defined period devoted to focused activity. The word exemplifies how a concrete bodily action—sitting—can give rise to abstract notions of time, assembly, and purpose in language.