WordLookup traces any English word back through history to its Latin, Greek, Old English, French, Germanic, Sanskrit, and Arabic origins. See the full etymology chain —
every language a word passed through on its way into modern English.
Search for "compel" and watch it unfold: borrowed from Latin compellere, itself from com- ("together") + pellere ("to drive"). Search "philosophy" and trace it from Greek
philosophia — philos ("loving") + sophia ("wisdom").
FEATURES
- Etymology chains showing the complete journey of a word through languages
- Morpheme breakdowns revealing how Latin and Greek words were built from smaller parts
- Classical sources from Lewis & Short (Latin) and Liddell-Scott-Jones (Greek) lexicons, with original definitions and quotations
- Semantic relationships including cognates, doublets, calques, and loan translations across languages
- Word definitions with online dictionary fallback
- Falling words — an ambient display of etymology-rich words you can tap to explore
- Dark, minimal interface designed for reading
- Entirely offline — no internet connection required after download