
Word of the Day: Zymurgy
Today’s word of the day, thanks to the Word Guru daily email, is zymurgy. Pronounced / ˈzaɪ mɜr dʒi /, this noun names “the branch of applied chemistry dealing with fermentation, as in winemaking, brewing, the preparation of yeast, etc.” (https://www.dictionary.com/browse/zymurgy).
Zymurgy appears in English in “1868, from Greek zymo-, combining form of zyme ‘a leaven’ (from PIE root *yeue-; see juice) + -ourgia ‘a working,’ from ergon ‘work’ (from PIE root *werg- ‘to do’)” (https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=zymurgy). That PIE root word, *werg, “might form all or part of: allergic; allergy; argon; boulevard; bulwark; cholinergic; demiurge; dramaturge; energy; erg (n.1) “unit of energy;” ergative; ergonomics; ergophobia; George; georgic; handiwork; irk; lethargic; lethargy; liturgy; metallurgy; organ; organelle; organic; organism; organize; orgy; surgeon; surgery; synergism; synergy; thaumaturge; work; wright; wrought; zymurgy.
It might also be the source of: Greek ergon ‘work,’ orgia ‘religious performances;’ Armenian gorc ‘work;’ Avestan vareza ‘work, activity;’ Gothic waurkjan, Old English wyrcan ‘to work,’ Old English weorc ‘deed, action, something done;’ Old Norse yrka ‘work, take effect’” (ibid.).
One of the fun things about doing this blog for me has been learning new things. For instance, I had no idea that for 40 years I suffered, like so many people, from ergophobia. (Just kidding; I actually loved my job, or most of it.) I also had no idea that orgy derives from a word meaning “work.” I probably didn’t work enough in my life.
Etymonline.com provides a couple more interesting little facts about the word zymurgy. First, “It seems to have been a dictionary-word only, before 1900” (ibid.) Second, “It is the last word in many standard English dictionaries (and this one); but Century Dictionary ends with Zyxomma (‘A genus of Indian dragon-flies,’ from Greek zeuxis ‘a joining’) and in the OED [2nd ed.] the last word is zyxt, an obsolete Kentish form of the second person singular of see….”
At the dictionary’s letter A
Mr. Brandt is young and gay
But when at last he reaches zed
He’s in his wheelchair, nearly dead
[Einar Haugen].” (ibid.)
Well, I missed it by 16 days, but given today’s word, it seems appropriate to celebrate International Beer Day, which actually was held on August 8, 2025.
How old is beer? “The earliest archaeological evidence of fermentation consists of 13,000-year-old residues of a beer with the consistency of gruel, used by the semi-nomadic Natufians for ritual feasting, at the Raqefet Cave in the Carmel Mountains near Haifa in Israel” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_beer). That’s a long time ago. Another site says, “historians were also able to trace records of beer already existing as old as 10,000 BCE in the West — specifically in Mesopotamia or the land ‘between the rivers’ — a region which was home to early human civilization groups such as the Sumerians and the Babylonians” (https://thebeerexchange.io/history-of-beer/).
In addition to debating how long beer has been around and where it shows up first, people disagree about how the brewing process was discovered. “Some claim that the beer-making process was accidentally discovered when grains that were supposed to be used to make bread were fermented over time. On the other hand, some argue that the creation of beer was intentional.
Max Nelson, a professor from the University of Windsor, said, ‘Fruits often naturally ferment through the actions of wild yeast, and the resultant alcoholic mixtures are often sought out and enjoyed by animals. Pre-agricultural humans in various areas (from the Neolithic Period) surely similarly sought out such fermenting fruits…in the hopes that they would have an interesting physical effect’” (ibid.).
One reason people began drinking beer was that the water wasn’t all that safe: “In the arid lands of Mesopotamia, water sources were often contaminated and unsafe to consume. Thus, beer served as a vital alternative – a safe and thirst-quenching solution. With its alcoholic content and the process of fermentation, beer acted as a reliable beverage that could be consumed without concern for waterborne diseases” (https://summerstirs.com/why-did-people-start-drinking-beer/).
In the European Middle Ages, people often drank small beer or small ale. Small beer has an alcoholic content far lower than that of normal beer. “Sometimes unfiltered and porridge-like, it was a favoured drink in Medieval Europe and colonial North America compared with more expensive beer containing higher levels of alcohol. Small beer was also produced in households for consumption by children and by servants” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_beer). Keep in mind that Europeans in the Middle Ages did not have coffee or tea, much less Coca Cola or Gatorade.
Tom Standage published a book some years ago called A History of the World in Six Glasses. The six drinks define six eras in human history. The first is beer, then wine, then spirits or rum, then coffee, then tea, and finally Coca Cola. “The first coffeehouse in England was opened in Oxford in 1650” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_coffee). Up until then, people had either water, which could be fatal, or something alcoholic to drink. It’s no wonder the Industrial Revolution didn’t come about until the 18th century; before that, people were mostly a little bit buzzed all day long.
For the first part of my life, beer was actually pretty bland, dominated by the big brewing companies, at least in the USA. But in 1976, Congress passed a bill that gave a tax break to small breweries. The craft brewing industry probably could not have grown as it has without that change in the law. Later that year one of the country’s first microbreweries opened in California (https://www.craftbeer.com/beer/beer-history). Two years later, “Homebrew is legalized federally, allowing states to create their own homebrew laws when Jimmy Carter signs H.R. 1337. Homebrewers start working to legalize the hobby in their home states” (ibid.). In 2017, “The Smithsonian launches the American Brewing History Initiative to collect and document brewing history to be included in the renovated Food History exhibit at the Museum of American History in Washington, DC.” (ibid.). Now craft breweries are all over the place.
Beer certainly has come a long way, thousands upon thousands of years. Martin Luther supposedly said, “Whoever drinks beer, he is quick to sleep; whoever sleeps long, does not sin; whoever does not sin, enters Heaven! Thus, let us drink beer!” (https://www.christiantoday.com/news/let-us-drink-beer-the-wisdom-of-martin-luther-in-12-quotes). And we can thank zymurgy that we can drink beer.
Today’s image is of “Innis & Gunn The Original Single Malt Whisky Cask Matured Beer” (https://www.iceland.co.uk/p/innis-and-gunn-the-original-330ml/82291.html). I discovered this beer while in the UK, Edinburgh specifically, about 10 years ago. In Oxford I met a former Royal Marine named Charlie Long, and he told me about it. It was a nice find.