The word 'time' is among the most frequently used nouns in the English language and one of the most philosophically loaded. Its etymology, however, is surprisingly concrete. It descends from Old English 'tīma,' meaning 'time, period, or hour,' from Proto-Germanic *tīmô. The Proto-Germanic form is generally traced to the PIE root *deh₂-, meaning 'to divide' or 'to cut up,' through an extended form *dī-mon-. The original concept was not abstract duration but a physical metaphor: time as something divided into portions, sliced into measurable segments.
This PIE root *deh₂- was remarkably productive. In Greek, it produced 'daíomai' (to divide, to distribute) and 'dêmos' (a division of people — the root of 'democracy'). Some scholars also connect it to 'daimon' (δαίμων), originally 'a divider of fate' or 'an apportioner of destiny,' before the word acquired its later sense of 'spirit' or 'demon.' If this connection holds, then 'time' and 'demon' share a distant ancestor
Within the Germanic family, *tīmô produced Old Norse 'tími' (time, proper time), Dutch 'tijd,' and, in an older formation from the same root, the English word 'tide.' The relationship between 'time' and 'tide' is one of English's most instructive examples of semantic divergence from a common source. Old English 'tīd' meant 'time, season, hour' — it was essentially a synonym of 'tīma.' The compound 'tīdung' (literally 'what happens at a particular time') produced 'tidings' (news
The narrowing of 'tide' to mean exclusively the periodic rise and fall of the sea occurred gradually during the Middle English period. The ocean's movements were called 'tides' because they happened at regular, predictable *times* — the time-word became specialized to refer to the most conspicuous recurring temporal phenomenon that coastal English speakers encountered daily. By the seventeenth century, the older meaning of 'tide' as 'time' had become archaic except in fixed expressions.
The phonological development of 'time' is regular. Old English 'tīma' had a long 'ī' vowel, which underwent the Great Vowel Shift in the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries, changing from /iː/ to the modern diphthong /aɪ/. This is the same shift that changed 'rīdan' to 'ride,' 'wīn' to 'wine,' and 'mīn' to 'mine.'
The word 'time' is notable for its extraordinary productivity in Modern English. It forms the basis of dozens of compounds (overtime, halftime, pastime, bedtime, daytime, nighttime, lifetime, sometime, meantime, meanwhile) and appears in hundreds of idioms ('time flies,' 'in the nick of time,' 'time is money,' 'behind the times'). Benjamin Franklin's 1748 maxim 'time is money' crystallized a specifically capitalist understanding of time as a quantifiable commodity, an idea that would have been alien to the word's Proto-Indo-European originators, for whom *deh₂- simply meant to divide something into parts.
The word's grammatical behavior is also unusual. 'Time' can function as an uncountable noun ('I don't have time'), a countable noun ('three times'), an adverb ('I've been there many a time'), and even a verb ('time the race'). This versatility reflects the concept's centrality to human experience — we need the word so often and in so many contexts that it has been pressed into service across grammatical categories.