Serum Definition & Meaning – Merriam-Webster

Etymology

Noun

borrowed from Latin, “whey, wheylike fluid,” of uncertain origin

Note:
Latin serum has been conventionally linked with Greek orós, of identical meaning, and both compared with the Sanskrit verbal base sar-, allegedly meaning ” flow” in Vedic texts (hence P. Chantraine in Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecque). More recently, however, this interpretation has been rejected, and sar- read as “run off”—hence Vedic Sanskrit ásarat “ran off,” prasísarti “lets run, stretches, extends,” not akin to sáraḥ “lake, pond” and related words, which describe still water. The Sanskrit etymon has been further compared with Greek hállomai “(I) spring, hop,” Latin salīre “to jump” (see sally entry 2). If this is correct the Indo-European base is *sel-, and any connection to serum and orós impossible; these two words are left then without any certain etymology.

Adjective

from attributive use of serum entry 1