Zinc entered English in the mid-17th century directly from German Zink, a term first recorded in the writings of Paracelsus around 1526. The Swiss-German alchemist and physician used the word to describe a metal that European metallurgists were only beginning to understand as a distinct substance, though they had been using it unknowingly in brass for thousands of years.
The most widely accepted etymology connects Zink to the German word Zinke, meaning prong, tooth, or pointed projection. When zinc solidifies after smelting, it can form jagged, tooth-like crystalline structures that would have been distinctive to furnace workers. An alternative theory traces the word to Persian sing (stone), reflecting possible transmission of metallurgical knowledge from the East.
Zinc has a peculiar place in the history of chemistry. Brass — an alloy of copper and zinc — was produced in ancient Rome, India, and China, but no one in the classical Western world recognized zinc as a separate element. Indian metallurgists at Zawar in Rajasthan were producing pure zinc by the 9th century using a sophisticated downward-distillation technique. European scientists could not isolate the element until 1746, when the German chemist Andreas Marggraf finally developed a reliable method.
Once isolated, zinc found industrial uses rapidly. Galvanization — coating iron with zinc to prevent rust — became one of the most important metallurgical processes of the industrial age. The word galvanize itself later acquired a figurative meaning of shocking into action, but its literal sense remains rooted in zinc's protective chemistry.
Today zinc is the fourth most commonly used metal worldwide, essential in construction, batteries, and pharmaceutical supplements. The word has remained virtually unchanged since Paracelsus wrote it down five centuries ago in his Basel laboratory.