starve, v. [stahrv, stärv]
-As far back in history as scholars can peer, the ultimate ancestor of today's English
starve is the prehistoric Indo-European root
ster- 'rigid, solid, stiff.' This branched off into Greek
sterphnios 'stiff, rigid' and
sterphos 'hide, skin,' Old Church Slavonic
strublu 'strong, hard,' and Proto-Germanic
sterbanan 'to be stiff' and
star 'to be rigid.' While
star went on to become the ancestor of English
stare 'to look fixedly (at something),' out of
sterbanan came Old Frisian
sterva, Old Saxon
sterban and Old High German
sterban, Middle Dutch
sterven, and Old English
steorfan 'to die.' (Interestingly, this same root also led to Old Norse
stjarfi 'tetanus,' a medical condition where the muscle fibers in many parts of the body are continually contracted.) The link between 'rigid, stiff' and 'dead' is easily understood. The Old English word was likely in use prior to 1000 CE and could refer to any type of death; we find
to starve of hunger* in 1124. By 1225 at the latest, was replaced by Middle English
sterven, which added on to the original 'to die' the meaning of 'to kill.' Sometime around the 14th century, the meaning changed to 'to die of cold' - again, an easily understood connection to the original notion of 'rigid, stiff.' It is not until 1530 that we see
starve used in its modern sense of 'to kill with hunger.' Our common expression
to starve to death (c. 1910) would have sounded absolutely absurd to early English speakers, who might think we are idiots for saying someone died to death.