The word 'unit' has a precise birth date and a known inventor, which is unusual for any common English word. It was coined in 1570 by John Dee, the Elizabethan mathematician, astronomer, and occult philosopher, in his preface to Henry Billingsley's English translation of Euclid's Elements. Dee needed an English equivalent for the Greek mathematical term 'monas' (μονάς, a unit, the number one as the foundation of all other numbers), and he formed 'unit' from Latin 'ūnus' (one), on the analogy of 'digit' from Latin 'digitus' (finger).
Before Dee's coinage, English had 'unity' (from Old French 'unité,' from Latin 'ūnitās') but no shorter word for the basic indivisible quantity. Dee's invention filled a gap: where 'unity' was abstract and philosophical, 'unit' was concrete and mathematical — a single countable thing, the fundamental building block of number.
Latin 'ūnus' (one) descends from Proto-Indo-European *óynos (one), which also produced Old Irish 'óin' (one), Gothic 'ains' (one), and Old English 'ān' — the ancestor of modern English 'one,' 'an,' and 'a.' The PIE root is thus the ultimate source of both the native English word 'one' and the Latinate coinage 'unit.' They are the same word, separated by five thousand years of divergent sound changes.
The family of Latin 'ūnus' in English is enormous. 'Unity' (the state of being one), 'unite' (to make one), 'union' (a making-one, a joining), 'unique' (one of a kind), 'universe' (turned into one — all things combined), 'uniform' (of one form), 'unilateral' (on one side), 'unanimous' (of one mind), and 'unicorn' (one horn) all derive from this root. Each word captures a different aspect of oneness: wholeness, singularity, sameness, agreement, or exclusivity.
Dee's coinage succeeded brilliantly. Within decades, 'unit' had expanded from pure mathematics into general English usage. By the seventeenth century, it could mean any single thing regarded as an elementary component. By the eighteenth century, it was established in measurement ('a unit of length'), military organization ('a military unit'), and housing ('a residential unit'). The word's trajectory illustrates how a technical coinage, if it fills a genuine lexical gap, can spread rapidly through a language.
John Dee himself is one of the most remarkable figures in Elizabethan England. He was Queen Elizabeth I's court astrologer, a mathematician of genuine ability, a geographer who coined the term 'British Empire,' a bibliophile whose personal library was the largest in England, and an occultist who claimed to communicate with angels through a medium named Edward Kelley. His mathematical and linguistic contributions — including the word 'unit' — tend to be overshadowed by his reputation as a magician, but they were arguably more consequential.
The concept that Dee was naming — the unit, the monad, the indivisible one — has a philosophical history stretching back to Pythagoras, who regarded the monad as the source of all numbers and, by extension, all reality. For Pythagoras, 'one' was not a number but the principle from which numbers emerged. This philosophical weight clings to 'unit': it is not just a convenient label but a name for the foundation of quantitative thought.