A microscopic organism or agent, especially one that is pathogenic, such as a bacterium or virus.
Usage The terms
germ and
microbe have been used to refer to invisible agents of disease since the nineteenth century, when scientists introduced the
germ theory of disease, the idea that infections and contagious diseases are caused by
microorganisms. Microbe, a shortening and alteration of
microorganism, comes from the Greek prefix
mikro-, “small,” and the word
bios, “life.” Scientists no longer use the terms
germ and
microbe very much. Today they can usually identify the specific agents of disease, such as individual species of bacteria or viruses. To refer generally to agents of disease, they use the term
pathogen, from the Greek
pathos, “suffering,” and the suffix
-gen, “producer.” They use
microorganism to refer to any unicellular organism, whether disease-causing or not.