What is the origin of "earthling"?
- What is the origin of the word earthling?
- Are there other words with a similar meaning (marsling, venusling)?
As reported on Etymonline:
Old English yrþling "plowman" (see earth + -ling); the sense of "inhabitant of the earth" is from 1590s. Earthman was originally (1860) "a demon who lives in the earth;" science fiction sense of "inhabitant of the planet Earth" first attested 1949 in writing of Robert Heinlein. Earlier in this sense was earthite (1825).
However, I found this too:
Ælfric (955–1020)
Teacher:hwæt sægest þu yrþlingc hu begæst þu weorc þin
The word earthling is formed from the word earth and the suffix -ling, meaning something from earth, or something related to earth. Here earth can either refer to the planet, or to the soil.
It's now mostly used in science fiction to mean humans from earth, but it existed even before that. One older use is in the meaning of farmer or ploughman, another is in the meaning of mortal as contrast to heavenly creatures or gods.
In science fiction the term Terran is also commonly used.
NOAD gives for “-ling”:
- forming nouns from nouns, adjectives, and verbs (such as hireling, youngling).
- forming nouns from adjectives and adverbs (such as darling, sibling, underling).
- forming diminutive words : gosling | sapling. • often with depreciatory reference : princeling
This gives you some more examples...