Language Matters | Where the word โ€˜Easterโ€™ comes from and how only 2 European languages use it


โ€œHappy Easter!โ€ is a wish that will be articulated by many this Sunday, certainly by those observing the celebration of the resurrection of Jesus โ€“ with both Western (Gregorian) and Orthodox Easter being celebrated on the same day this year.

What is interesting is that among the European languages, the word โ€œEasterโ€ is only found in English and German, while in other Germanic languages and most European languages, the word for the festival is derived from the corresponding word for โ€œPassoverโ€.

Passover is the Jewish festival commemorating the liberation of the Israelites in ancient Egypt after the Tenth Plague โ€“ when the Angel of Death killed all the firstborns in Egypt including the Pharoahโ€™s, but passed over the homes of Israelites whose door posts had, on Godโ€™s command, been smeared with lambโ€™s blood.

The linguistic environment of the early Christian era encompassed a few significant languages.

These included Aramaic, a northwest Semitic language which was a long-standing literary and liturgical language and the lingua franca of the ancient Near East by the time of Jesus; and Hebrew, the dominant language of the Hebrew Bible or Old Testament and the language of the Jews.

A painting of a Passover feast. The Jewish festival commemorates the liberation of the Israelites in Egypt after the Tenth Plague. Photo: Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images
A painting of a Passover feast. The Jewish festival commemorates the liberation of the Israelites in Egypt after the Tenth Plague. Photo: Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images

Other significant languages were Greek, the language of the Septuagint โ€“ a pre-Christian translation of the Hebrew Bible, the original language of the New Testament and the lingua franca of Levant at the time; and Latin, the language of the Roman Empire and soon an important language of the Christian Church.

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