The prize-winning etymologies of “gold,” “silver,” and “bronze”

These word origins, like humans, are fascinated by “bright,” “shiny” objects

Updated February 7, 2026

Fast Mash

  • Gold is from the Proto-Indo-European *ghel-, meaning, variously, “yellow,” “bright,” “shining,” “green,” “blue,” and “gray”
  • Derivatives of *ghel– include chlorine, clean, and the family of gl– words, like glassglitter, and glow
  • Silver is from the Old English siolfor; ultimate origin is unknown, perhaps from the Akkadian sarapu (to smelt)
  • Bronze may be from the Persian birinj (copper) and may be connected to the Latin aes Brundusinium, referring to bronze mirrors made in Brindisi, Italy
  • The Indo-European *arg– (bright, shining) is the origin of Romance words for “silver” (e.g., argent, Ag) and *aus– for “gold” (e.g., aureate, Au)

In Ancient Greece, victorious Olympians were crowned with olive wreathes. Upon the Olympics’ reinstitution in 1896, winners were still greeted with this symbolic prize, but also with silver medals.

It wasn’t until the 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis, Missouri, though, that the Games issued gold, silver, and bronze medals for its top-three competitors.

Let’s bite into goldsilver, and bronze to check out what they’re made of.



Gold etymology

All that glitters may be gold, etymologically speaking.

Unchanged in form from the Old English, gold is from the Proto-Germanic *gulth- and Proto-Indo-European *ghel-, meaning “yellow.” This root could also mean “bright” or “shining.”

And, apparently, all that glitters can be “green,” “blue,” and “gray,” for *ghel– so named other such bright colors or sheeny objects.

This root *ghel– is definitely worth its weight in etymological gold, though, for it parented the Greek khloros, “pale green,” giving English everything from chlorine and chlorophyll to the name Chloe.

The root also birthed the Germanic clean and clear. In fact, its Germanic kin are many: glad, glance, glare, glassglaze, gleam, glee, glimpse, glint, glitter, gloss,, glow, and glower, among yet others, all featuring the initial cluster gl-.

Does this gl– mean something in itself? The topic is contentious.

What are phonesthemes?

Linguists call this gl- a phonestheme, an example of sound symbolism, the idea that certain sounds inherently have a meaning.

Onomatopoeia is a similar, more familiar concept. The cow moos, the bee buzzes, the doorbell ding-dongs. These are all words that imitate or echo what they are naming. The sound symbolizes its meaning.

But gl- is a little more interesting. It has no meaning in and of itself. Gl- on its own cannot be said to mean anything in the way that cat, throw, or rumor do—or in the way that pre– or post- or –ly or –hood do.

But gl– does appear in a family of words whose meanings are all connected—here, through a common sense of “shiny,” “bright,” “light,” “dealing with vision,” or what have you.

Yet if you clip off the gl-, you aren’t left with a meaningful unit of sound. Take glitter or glance. If I take of the gl-, I am left with -itter and -ance, which don’t mean anything. (More technically, they aren’t morphemes.) Unlike when I undo the un– in undo or lob off the –er in “faster”: do and fast have meaning.

Words beginning with fl– (flow, fly, flutter. flurry), sl- (slide, slippery, slick, slither), and sn– (snore, sniffle, sneeze, snout) also display this phonesthemic property.

So, does gl– suggest the shiny or visual properties that its word family shares? Does fl– imply flying, sn– various nasal business? Globe, flower, and snow also feature their respective consonant clusters but don’t really belong in their respective phonesthemic families.

The phenomenon is not absolute. Nothing is language is. But given the data, it’s hard to deny that there is some level of truth to this sound symbolism.

Meanwhile, gold’s chemical symbol, Au, is taken from the Latin aurum, meaning “gold.” It’s from a Proto-Indo-European root, *ausprobably meaning “to shine.” From this root, Latin got aes and Old English ar, which could both mean, well, “copper,” “bronze,” and “brass.”

Silver etymology

The name for this runner-up medal comes from the Old English siolfor or seolfor. (In Old English, letter sounded much like our v.)

We can trace the Old English back to the Old Norse, silfr and reconstruct a Proto-Germanic *silubr-.

From here, we don’t really know. Perhaps silver is all the more precious for it. Russian has serebo and Lithuanian has sidabras, so etymologists speculate a Balto-Slavic or Asian origin. The philologist Ernest Klein offered the Akkadian sarpu, refined “silver,” from sarapu, “to smelt.”

The Indo-European root for silver is reflected in silver’s chemical name, Ag, from Latin’s silver equivalent, argentum. Like *ghel– and *aus-, argentum has *arg-, “to shine,” though often with an especial reference to “white.”

The Argonauts were the mythic sailors of the ship, the Argos, led byJason in his quest for the Golden Fleece. In Greek, argos means “swift,” related to that root for “shining” and “bright.”

Bronze etymology

Nowadays, bronze may evoke being tan before being in third place. It turns out, though, that the alloy may have more in common with vanity—um, I mean skin cancer, er, social constructions of beauty, uh, tanning—than we might think.

Bronze is an alloy of copper and tin, and comes to English, via French and Italian, from the Medieval Latin bronzium and its variant brundium.

From here, the etymology is itself something of an alloy. As lexical maven Eric Partridge maintained, bronze is ultimately mined from the Persian birindj (other variants including birinj or pirinj), meaning “copper,” “for the alloy came to Europe from the East.”

Philologist Walter Skeat cited the Roman historian Pliny, whose writes of aes Brundusinium, referring to the southeastern Italian seaside town, Brindisi, whose Latin name was Brundisium, “where bronze mirrors were made.” 

The Latin Aes could mean “copper,” “brass,” “bronze” and the various objects made from them include money, armor, and trumpets. Perhaps you’ll look extra bronzed in one of those mirrors.

The chemical symbol for bronze is … Oh, you don’t remember it? Good. There isn’t one. Just making sure you’re awake.

Etruscan bronze mirror, 3rd-2nd c. BC; image courtesy of Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Bright, shiny objects

*Ghel-, *aus-, *arg-: some of our most precious treasures—an Olympic medal, say, awarding a once-in-a-lifetime performance against the most elite competition following years of training and sacrifice—come down to “bright” and “shiny” objects.

That’s a bit glib, of course, as metallurgy certainly had its hand in advancing civilization.

But perhaps not too glib, for might not these roots begin in that most fundamentally human act—the act of curiosity, marveling at an object glittering in a riverbed or on the wall of a cave, brighter and shinier than the unremarkable dirt and rock, tinkering and tooling and experimenting with them until it is shaped into something new, an instrument of culture?

It may not take much to get our attention, but we sure can do a whole lot with it.

42 responses to “The prize-winning etymologies of “gold,” “silver,” and “bronze””

  1. I’m interested in etymology and Sociolinguistics, swearing in particular. I’ll be posting on that shortly.

  2. Reblogged this on Rantings from inside my head and commented:
    As a linguist, I deem this an important thing to know

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  4. […] (Lots of Old Norse and origins unknown.) I also looked at the histories of the winning medals: gold, silver, and bronze. (Lots of Indo-European, with a surprising place-name behind […]

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