ADVERTISEMENT
CULTURA COLECTIVA
Cultura Colectiva
  • Entretainment
    • Music
    • Celebrities
    • Movies
      • Movies
      • TV Series
  • Fashion
  • Technology
    • Tech
    • Science
    • Nature
  • History
  • Art
    • Art
    • Photography
    • Design
  • Link in bio
  • Español
  • Lifestyle
No Result
View All Result
Cultura Colectiva
No Result
View All Result
Home History

10 Words In English You Didn’t Know Come From Arabic

Isabel Carrasco by Isabel Carrasco
February 21, 2019
in History
10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

10 Words In English You Didn't Know Come From Arabic

M7gcawij4jdufinrpdx2dyqpzq - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

By Yacine Ahtaitay

Arabic is one of the most ancient, varied, and beautifully scripted languages. It is spoken by nearly 400 million users, placing it among the 5 most spoken languages in the world. Its influence on Spanish since the time of the Moors is well known, but what’s less well known is how many commonly used English words were actually taken from Arabic. English didn’t borrow all of the words directly; they mostly came filtered though Latin, Turkish, French, Spanish, German, and/or Italian, and have changed in form — and sometimes meaning — since they left Arabic. Here is a list of the 10 very common words in English that come from Arabic:

1. Zero

Bmnnnlo4lzgzbgkqijxuxvk3fa - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

The electronic device you’re reading this on wouldn’t exist without digital programming, which wouldn’t exist without the number 0 (zero), which — believe it or not — Europeans didn’t think of as a number until the Italian mathematician Fibonacci introduced it to them in the early 1200s. He learned it from Arabic culture in North Africa, where he grew up. He took the Arabic word sifr, meaning “empty” or “nothing,” and Latinized it as zephyrum. That got trimmed down a little bit over time to the Italian zero. Of course, along with the concept, he needed a way of writing it. Roman numerals didn’t have a zero (of course), and anyway they’re not good for doing decimal mathematics: it’s way harder to work with XX times LXVII than with 20 times 67. So, he borrowed numerals from Arabic, too — which is why typographers call these digits Arabic numerals. (The way they look in Arabic now is different from how they look for us now).

You can also read about 10 Words And Their Historical Origins You Didn’t Know Had Beautiful Meanings.

2. Alcohol

Xdhuigmds5djxe7hwvmt4g32a4 - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

Are you surprised that alcohol comes from Arabic? The word does, but the thing doesn’t. In the original Arabic, al-kuhl means “the kohl,” which is to say a cosmetic powder for the eyes. It was made by an extraction process from a mineral, and European chemists took to using alcohol to refer to anything produced by extraction or distillation. But then the “alcohol of wine” (the spirit you get from distilling wine) took over the name exclusively.

3. Sugar

Mrtxvrmmwvca7h477uhrew65xy - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

Westerners owe a lot of enjoyment to Arabic traders. They brought sugar to Western Europeans (first, the Italians and French, and from them the English), plus their word for it, sukkar, which they, in turn, got from Sanskrit, sharkara.

4. Coffee

Jer6tukrmrab5p54qlbtli4lu4 - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

English got this word from Italian, caffè, which was taken from Turkish, kahve. Turkish got it from Arabic, qahwah. Western Europe also got the beverage from Arabia (via Italy via Turkey); Arabia, in turn, got it from eastern Africa.

5. Orange

77ifeyhzxzdv5oc4hfoooqlloq - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

Originally from South and East Asia, oranges were known in Sanskrit as naranga. This became the Persian narang, which became the Arabic naranj. Arabic traders brought oranges to Spain, which led to the Spanish naranja. Then it went into old French as un norenge, then Modern French as une orenge. Then English took it from the French and it became orange.

6. Candy

Rxf7rvzpknbyhfpgfneqmwhpdi - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

English also got candy from Arabic — qand — which referred to the crystallized juice of sugar cane. Arabic got it from Persian, which got it from Sanskrit.

7. Syrup

Fgnqpqtlu5hphfvxf7d3zue2vi - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

Of course, if Arabic gave English sugar and candy, it also gave it syrup. In this case, the original is sharab, which refers to a beverage: wine, fruit juice, or something sweet.

8. Cotton

Mtaytjlrlvg6xkvaoo7coueyoy - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

Cotton isn’t originally from Arabia — it’s native to India and Central and South America, among other places — but since Westerners were doing trade with traders from Arabia, Americans and the rest of Western Europe got this word for from Arabic, qutn.

9. Magazine

Qefkwroayrd7leaqn6543yyvya - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

A magazine is a veritable storehouse of well-turned prose, which is why it’s called a magazine — the word originally means “storehouse.” It’s still used in the military for a storage place for explosives. English got the word from French (which now uses magasin to refer to a store), which got it from Italian, magazzino, which came from Arabic, makzin.

10. Mattress

4mtk3jwt3ra65akvg6jkqfugba - 10 words in english you didn't know come from arabic

Speaking of furniture, Europeans didn’t always sleep on big, soft, cushioned things. Bedding was sparer throughout much of their history. But the Crusaders, for all the bad things they did, at least learned a few things from Arabic culture, one of which was the idea of sleeping on cushions. And the Arabic word for the place where the cushions were thrown down is matrah, which came from taraha, “throw.” It came into Latin as materacium or materatium, and from there Italian and the other European languages picked it up.

This post originally appeared in The Language Nerds

Do you have a blog of your own? Do you want to write articles about language, art, lifestyle, and fashion? Click here and send a 500-word article for the chance to be published in our website.

More articles about cultures and language:
“I Have A Dream:” Ten Quotes From The Most Celebrated Speech From The Last Century
Here’s How To Say “I Love You” In 37 Different Languages
Five Proven Hacks To Learn Another Language, According to Science


Isabel Carrasco

Isabel Carrasco

History buff, crafts maniac, and makeup lover!

ADVERTISEMENT
Cultura Colectiva

© Cultura Colectiva 2026

Nosotros

  • Conócenos
  • Código de Ética
  • Aviso de Privacidad
  • Tarifario

Síguenos

× publicidad
Advertisement
No Result
View All Result
  • Entretainment
    • Music
    • Celebrities
    • Movies
      • Movies
      • TV Series
  • Fashion
  • Technology
    • Tech
    • Science
    • Nature
  • History
  • Art
    • Art
    • Photography
    • Design
  • Link in bio
  • Español
  • Lifestyle

© Cultura Colectiva 2026