MATRIX

(From Math Words)

The first mathematical use of the word matrix was around 1850 by Sylvester. Sylvester saw a matrix as a way of obtaining determinants, but did not fully realize their potential. Within a year of his first use of the term he introduced the idea to Cayley who was the first to publish the inverse of a matrix and treat them as purely abstract mathematical forms. Sylvester was also the first to use the word "minor" (see same below) for a smaller matrix. I came across the following anecdote about Sylvester and didn't know where else to put it:

The use of mathematical arrays to solve problems predates the application of the name by about 2000 years. Around 200 BC in the Chinese text Juizhang Suanshu (Nine Chapters on the Mathematical Arts) the author solves a system of three equations in three unknowns by placing the coefficients on a counting board and solving by a process that we today call Gaussian Elimination. Elimination would not become well known in the West until the beginning of the Nineteenth Century. By the early 1500's, Cardan states a rule, regula de modo, for solving two equations in two unknowns by much the same method as Creamer's rule.

The word matrix comes from the same Latin root that gives us mother, and was used to refer to the womb, and pregnant animals. It became generalized to mean any situation or substance that contributes to the origin of something.