The verb 'sing' is one of the oldest and most stable words in the English language, descending through a clear and uncontested chain from Proto-Indo-European through Proto-Germanic to Old English and beyond. It comes from Old English 'singan,' with the characteristic strong verb conjugation: 'singan' (infinitive), 'sang' (past tense singular), 'sungon' (past tense plural), 'sungen' (past participle). This pattern survives almost unchanged in Modern English: sing, sang, sung.
The Proto-Germanic ancestor is *singwaną, reconstructed from the consistent evidence of cognates across the Germanic family: German 'singen,' Dutch 'zingen,' Old Norse 'syngva' (later 'syngja'), Gothic 'siggwan,' Swedish 'sjunga,' and Danish 'synge.' The remarkable consistency of these forms — all clearly related, all preserving the same consonant skeleton — testifies to the word's antiquity and the importance of the concept it names.
Behind Proto-Germanic lies the PIE root *sengʷʰ-, meaning 'to sing' or, more provocatively, 'to make an incantation.' This latter sense is important for understanding the word's prehistoric context. In many early Indo-European cultures, the boundary between singing and spell-casting was porous or nonexistent. The human voice, when deployed in sustained
This association is particularly vivid in the Norse tradition. Old Norse 'syngva' could mean both 'to sing a song' and 'to chant a magical formula.' The Poetic Edda describes Odin learning magical songs (ljóð) through an agonizing initiation on Yggdrasil, the world tree. The related Old Norse word 'galdr' (incantation, spell-song) derives from 'gala' (to sing, to crow), connecting
The strong verb pattern of 'sing' — with its vowel alternation from /ɪ/ (sing) to /æ/ (sang) to /ʌ/ (sung) — is a direct inheritance from the Proto-Indo-European ablaut system, the process of systematic vowel gradation that was PIE's primary morphological tool. This same ablaut pattern appears in other English strong verbs: ring/rang/rung, drink/drank/drunk, swim/swam/swum, begin/began/begun. These verbs are among the oldest in the language, their irregular patterns a fossil record of a grammatical system that predates English by millennia.
In Middle English, the verb retained its strong conjugation but simplified its plural past tense — the Old English distinction between singular 'sang' and plural 'sungon' was leveled, with 'sang' winning out as the general past tense form. The infinitive lost its '-an' ending, becoming simply 'sing' by the fourteenth century.
The semantic range of 'sing' has expanded over time. Beyond its primary meaning of vocal music production, 'sing' is used for the high-pitched sound of a bullet passing overhead ('the bullet sang past his ear'), the noise of a kettle coming to boil, and — in underworld slang since the early twentieth century — confessing to the police or informing on accomplices. This last usage, 'to sing' meaning 'to talk, to confess,' may derive from the metaphor of a bird singing freely, or from the idea of someone pouring out words as freely as a melody.
The word 'singsong,' meaning a monotonous rising and falling intonation, dates from the late seventeenth century and captures the idea of speech that has become excessively song-like. 'Singalong,' a gathering where people sing together, is a twentieth-century compound. The agent noun 'singer' dates from Old English ('singere'), making it one of the oldest occupational titles in the language.