- admiral
- [13] Admirals originally had nothing
specifically to do with the sea. The word comes
ultimately from Arabic ’amīr ‘commander’
(from which English later also acquired emir
[17]). This entered into various titles followed by
the particle -al- ‘of’ (’amīr-al-bahr ‘commander
of the sea’, ’amīr-al-mūminīn ‘commander of
the faithful’), and when it was borrowed into
European languages, ’amīr-al- became
misconstrued as an independent, free-standing
word. Moreover, the Romans, when they
adopted it, smuggled in their own Latin prefix
ad-, producing admiral. When this reached
English (via Old French) it still meant simply
‘commander’, and it was not until the time of
Edward III that a strong naval link began to
emerge. The Arabic title ’amīr-al-bahr had had
considerable linguistic influence in the wake of
Arabic conquests around the Mediterranean
seaboard (Spanish almirante de la mar, for
instance), and specific application of the term to
a naval commander spread via Spain, Italy, and
France to England. Thus in the 15th century
England had its Admiral of the Sea or Admiral of
the Navy, who was in charge of the national fleet.
By 1500 the maritime connection was firmly
established, and admiral came to be used on its
own for ‘supreme naval commander’.
=> EMIR
* * *The word for the naval rank is ultimately of Arabic origin, and represents the first part of the phrase amir al-bahr, 'commander of the sea.' The -d- entered the word by association with Latin admirabilis, 'admirable.'
The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins. 2013.