Screen1

  1. Mid-14th c., from a Germanic source — probably Middle Dutch scherm ‘screen, cover, shield’, via Old North French escren / Old French escran ‘fire-screen’; akin to Old High German skirm, skerm ‘shield, protection’, from Proto-Germanic *skirmjanan, ultimately the PIE root *sker- ‘to cut’.
  2. Something that shelters, protects, separates, or conceals; a fixed or movable partition.
  3. A surface on which the images of a film or other projection are made to appear.
  4. In an electronic device, the surface on which images and data are displayed.

What do our screens protect us from?

  1. Screen, Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/screen, and Online Etymology Dictionary, https://www.etymonline.com/word/screen (accessed 16 June 2026). Curiously, English screen and Italian schermo descend from the same Germanic root (*skirm- ‘shield, protection’), whereas Catalan and Spanish pantalla take a different, Romance route (probably an alteration of ventalla under the influence of pàmpol): at its root the word means protection, and each language screens the other.