The word "year" is a direct descendant of one of the oldest time-words in the Indo-European vocabulary. It comes from Old English ġēar (pronounced roughly "yar"), a neuter noun meaning the full cycle of seasons. The Old English form derives from Proto-Germanic *jērą, which in turn goes back to Proto-Indo-European *yeh₁r-, a root meaning "year" or "season."
The Germanic cognates are well attested and phonologically regular: German Jahr, Dutch jaar, Swedish and Danish år, Norwegian år, Icelandic ár, and Gothic jēr. All mean "year," and the sound correspondences follow the expected patterns of Germanic language development. The Gothic form, found in Wulfila's 4th-century Bible translation, shows the word was stable across the Germanic world.
The deeper Indo-European connections are illuminating. The PIE root *yeh₁r- is related to Avestan yārǝ ("year") and to Greek ὥρα (hṓra), which originally meant "season" or "time of year" before narrowing in later Greek to mean a specific portion of the day — eventually becoming the source of English "hour" via Latin hōra. The semantic journey from *yeh₁r- to both "year" and "hour" is a striking example of how a single root can diverge into terms for vastly different time scales. In the Slavic languages
The original meaning of *yeh₁r- may have been more specific than the full annual cycle. Some scholars propose that it initially referred to a single season — particularly the warm growing season or spring — and was later generalized to mean the complete cycle of seasons. Evidence for this includes the Slavic cognates that retain the meaning "spring" and the fact that many ancient cultures began their year in spring. The shift from "season" to "year" would parallel the way English
In Old English, ġēar was central to legal and literary language. Ages and reigns were measured in "winters" as often as in "years" (reflecting the Germanic practice of counting by the harsh season), but ġēar was the neutral, standard term. The compound ġēardagas ("year-days," meaning "days of old" or "former times") appears in Beowulf and other poetry.
The measurement of the year has its own long history intertwined with the word. The Anglo-Saxon year was originally organized around seasonal and agricultural markers, with the two major divisions being the period before and after midsummer. The adoption of the Roman calendar brought the 365-day year and the January start-date, though the ecclesiastical year (beginning with Advent) and the legal year (which in England began on March 25 until 1752) created competing systems that persisted for centuries.
The word "year" has generated a rich family of derivatives. "Yearly" dates from Old English ġēarlīc. "Yearlong" emerged in the 16th century. "Yesteryear," a translation of French antan, was coined by Dante Gabriel Rossetti in 1870. "New Year" as a compound dates from the 14th century. The related Latin-derived term "annual" (from Latin annuālis) provides
In its simplicity and antiquity, "year" connects modern English speakers to the deepest layers of Indo-European culture, where tracking the cycle of seasons was among the most vital intellectual achievements of early human civilization.