Calling something typical is, at its etymological core, saying it bears a stamp mark. Greek typos meant the dent or impression left by a blow — from typtein, 'to strike'. Coin makers struck metal to leave an image, and that image became a 'type'. Latin borrowed typicus for figurative or symbolic meanings, and Christian theologians ran with it: Old Testament events were 'types' that prefigured the New Testament. When English adopted typical in the early 1600s, it carried this theological freight. But within decades, the word had shed its scriptural robes and settled into everyday use as a synonym for 'representative' or 'characteristic'. The physical violence buried in the word vanished entirely, though its relatives — typewriter, typography, prototype — still gesture toward the act of striking an impression onto a surface.