The word 'vitamin' is one of the most precisely datable coinages in the English language: it was created in 1912 by Casimir Funk (1884–1967), a Polish-born biochemist working at the Lister Institute in London. Funk had isolated a substance from rice husks that cured beriberi in pigeons, and he believed he had identified a new class of dietary compounds essential for life. He named the substance 'vitamine,' combining Latin 'vīta' (life) with 'amine,' the chemical term for a nitrogen-containing organic compound, because his isolated substance appeared to be an amine.
The Latin component 'vīta' (life, existence, way of living) descends from PIE *gʷeyh₃- (to live), one of the fundamental PIE roots. This root produced an enormous family of words across the Indo-European languages. In Latin, it gave 'vīvere' (to live), 'vīvus' (alive), 'vītālis' (vital), and 'vīctus' (way of life, food). Through Latin and French
The '-amine' component has a more circuitous history. 'Amine' derives from 'ammonia,' which in turn comes from Latin 'sal ammoniacus' (salt of Ammon), named for ammonium chloride deposits found near the temple of the Egyptian god Amun (Greek 'Ámmōn') in the Libyan desert. The chemical suffix '-ine' was added to create 'amine,' designating a class of nitrogen-containing organic compounds. Funk's coinage thus fused a PIE root meaning 'life
The error at the heart of the word became apparent almost immediately. Not all the essential dietary factors that Funk had postulated turned out to be amines. Vitamin C (ascorbic acid), for example, contains no nitrogen and is not an amine. In 1920, the British biochemist Jack Cecil Drummond proposed in a letter to the journal Nature that the terminal '-e' be dropped, converting
The discovery and naming of individual vitamins proceeded through the early twentieth century. Elmer McCollum identified 'fat-soluble factor A' and 'water-soluble factor B' in 1913–1915, which later became vitamins A and B. The alphabetical naming system (A, B, C, D, E, K) reflects the order of discovery, though gaps in the sequence (there is no vitamin F, G, or H in standard usage) result from substances initially classified as vitamins that were later reclassified or found to be variants of others.
The cultural impact of the word 'vitamin' has been enormous. By the mid-twentieth century, vitamins had become a cornerstone of public health messaging and consumer marketing. Vitamin-fortified foods, vitamin supplements, and vitamin-enriched products constitute a global industry worth tens of billions of dollars. The word itself has acquired a metaphorical dimension: calling
The pronunciation of 'vitamin' varies between major English dialects. American English uses /ˈvaɪ.tə.mɪn/ (with a long 'i' in the first syllable, reflecting the Latin pronunciation of 'vīta'), while British English uses /ˈvɪt.ə.mɪn/ (with a short 'i'). Both are established; neither is more 'correct' than the other. The word has been borrowed