c.1400, from Old French fissure (13c.) and directly from Latin fissura "a cleft," from root of findere "to split, cleave," from PIE *bhi-n-d-, from root *bheid- "to split" (cf. Sanskrit bhinadmi "I cleave," Old High German
bizzan "to bite," Old English
bita "a piece bitten off,
morsel," Old Norse beita "to
hunt with dogs," beita
"pasture, food").