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单词 hap
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hapn.1

Brit. /hap/, U.S. /hæp/
Forms: Middle English hæp, Middle English happous (plural, perhaps transmission error), Middle English heppe, Middle English–1500s hape, Middle English–1600s happ, Middle English–1600s happe, Middle English– hap.
Origin: Probably a borrowing from early Scandinavian.
Etymology: Probably < early Scandinavian (compare Old Icelandic happ (neuter) chance, good luck, success (Icelandic happ), and Norwegian happ, Swedish regional happ, both masculine), cognate with Norwegian heppa to happen, Old Danish hap (adjective) lucky, Swedish hampa (reflexive) to happen (by chance), (regional) happa, habba to happen, succeed, Danish happe, and further with Old English gehæp (adjective) suitable, convenient, gehæplic (adjective) convenient, orderly, probably < the same Indo-European base as Early Irish cob victory (rare) and Old Church Slavonic kobĭ destiny.The explanation for the early Middle English form heppe (and similar forms shown by derivatives of this word) is not certain. Perhaps compare Old English gehæp (see above) or Old Icelandic heppinn (see happen adj.). For discussion of the Old English verbal form (past tense) hæpte , which perhaps represents a derivative from the same Germanic base, see hap v.1
Now archaic.
1. Good fortune, good luck; success, prosperity. In early use also paired with heal n., sele n. Cf. goodhap n. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > [noun] > good fortune
hapc1225
whatec1330
fortune1390
felicity1393
good luck1481
lucka1500
Lady Lucka1535
happiness1540
goodhap1557
faustity1656
serendipity1754
kokum1851
bonanza1878
c1225 (?c1200) St. Katherine (Royal) (1981) 85 Hef hire heorte up to þe hehe healent.., bisohte him help, & hap, & wisdom.
?a1300 (c1250) Prov. Hendyng (Digby) xxi, in Anglia (1881) 4 195 (MED) Som haveþ happe, and sum hongeþ bi.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 5564 Drightin þam sent bath happ and sele.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xx. l. 383 (MED) Now kynde me auenge, And sende me happe and hele.
a1500 (?a1450) Gesta Romanorum (BL Add. 9066) (1879) 388 He had hape in all thing that he bought.
1557 Earl of Surrey et al. Songes & Sonettes (new ed.) f. 104 My hap is turned to vnhappinesse.
a1600 A. Montgomerie Misc. Poems iv. 48 Then tak me with the foxis taill a flap, Since that the Hevins are hinderers of my hap.
1681 W. Robertson Phraseologia Generalis 471/1 Some have the hap; some stick in the gap.
1813 W. Scott Bridal of Triermain iii. Introd. iii. 122 Be it hap, or be it harm.
2. The chance or fortune that falls to a person; (one's) luck, lot; (also) an instance of this. Frequently modified by good (also bad, evil, etc.) and by possessive adjective. Cf. cross-hap n. at cross- comb. form 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [noun] > fortune or luck
sitheOE
hapc1275
fortunea1300
timingc1300
thriftc1305
speeda1325
casta1400
venturea1450
issuec1475
luck1481
success1548
speeding1573
chancing1583
potluck1592
ship1851
joss1913
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1963) l. 2443 Brennes wes swiðe hende his hap wes þe betere.
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 9188 God cas & hap inou..com to king steuene.
?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) ii. 59 He had bien in his courte, whan his happe was more hard.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 73 Þai comyn to the cost..And þere hyt into hauyn as hom happe felle.
c1576 T. Whythorne Autobiogr. (1961) 76 My hap at þat tȳm waz to be akquainted with A yoong ȝentilwoman.
1630 tr. G. Botero Relations Famous Kingdomes World (rev. ed.) 56 If you have the good hap to come into their houses.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost ix. 421 He sought them both, but wish'd his hap might find Eve separate. View more context for this quotation
1721 Wood's Athenæ Oxonienses (ed. 2) II. 98/2 It was then the hap and fortune of one Dr. Tho. Bayly a great Loyallist, to meet with this Nobleman.
1770 R. H. Waring Let. 24 Dec. in Philos. Trans. 1771 (Royal Soc.) (1772) 61 379 It has not been my hap to meet with it elsewhere.
1810 W. Scott Lady of Lake ii. 49 Remember then thy hap ere while A stranger in the lonely isle.
1886 W. Besant Children of Gibeon I. ii. iv. 302 Sickness and suffering, birth and death, good hap and evil hap.
1917 M. Hewlett Thorgils xi. 94 We had bad hap in driving on to this wilderness of rock and ice, and have never been able to mend our fortunes yet.
1989 F. Kellerman Quality of Mercy (2009) xi. 107 He thanked the stars for his good hap.
3. A fortuitous event or occurrence; a chance, accident, happening; (often contextually) an unfortunate event, mishap, mischance. Chiefly in plural. Cf. mishap n. 2a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [noun] > chance or fortuitous event
adventure?c1225
hapc1275
chancea1300
fortunea1375
accidenta1398
casualtya1513
to-fall1562
withfall1562
casual1566
casuality1574
stour1583
upcasta1616
contingency1620
haphazard1651
contingence1660
unaccountable1789
happen-so1816
happenchance1847
happenstance1857
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 9089 He wes his here-mærke in auer-ælche happe.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) i. l. 67 A wonder hap which me befell.
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende f. cclxxvv/1 That I be no more constreyned to haue soo many cursidnesses or ylle happes.
1559 W. Baldwin et al. Myrroure for Magistrates Glendower xxvii Of thinges to cum the haps be so vnset That none but fooles may warrant of them make.
1591 Troublesome Raigne Iohn i. sig. D3v No redresse to salue our awkward haps.
1600 E. Fairfax tr. T. Tasso Godfrey of Bulloigne viii. xlv. 150 But thou who hast part of thy race to ronne, With haps and hazards of this world itost.
1711 R. Steele Spectator No. 154. ⁋3 I entertained the Company..with the many Haps and Disasters.
1813 W. Scott Bridal of Triermain ii. 69 Musing on this strange hap the while, The king wends back to fair Carlisle.
1849 ‘G. Eliot’ in J. W. Cross George Eliot's Life (1885) I. 201 I have nothing to tell you; for all the ‘haps’ of my life are so indifferent.
1895 F. Thompson Sister Songs ii. 55 From human haps and mutabilities It rests exempt.
1932 T. E. Lawrence tr. Homer Odyssey (new ed.) xv. 220 Eumaeus, your tale of all these haps and sorrows sadly borne touches my heart.
2012 Pittsburgh Post-Gaz. (Nexis) 22 Dec. w10 Two interlocking plays..in adjacent theaters trace the comic haps and mishaps at an English country estate.
4. Absence of design or intent in relation to a particular event; fortuitousness, eventuality; chance or fortune, considered as the cause or determiner of events. Occasionally personified. Now rare. as hap would have it: = as luck would have it at have v. Phrases 1c.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [noun]
i-wonc1275
casec1300
adventurec1325
hap1340
accidencea1393
casualty1423
chefe1440
fortunityc1470
enchance?a1475
accidentc1485
chance1526
contingencec1530
lottery1570
casuality1574
chanceableness1581
contingency1623
fortuitiona1641
fortuitness1643
accidentalness1648
accidentality1651
fortuitousness1652
causelessnessa1660
temerity1678
fortuitya1747
spontaneity1751
felicity1809
accidentiality1814
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 24 Huanne þe lheuedi of hap heþ hire hueȝel y-went to þe manne.
?c1400 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (BL Add. 10340) (1868) v. pr. i. l. 4362 Happe is an vnwar bytydyng of causes assembled in þinges þat ben don for som oþer þinge.
c1430 (c1386) G. Chaucer Legend Good Women (Cambr. Gg.4.27) (1879) l. 1773 Hap helpith hardy man alday.
tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) iii. l. 710 Hit is bot happe of plaunte a tre to gete.
1534 T. More Treat. Passion in Wks. 1311/1 Thynges accompted to fall vnder chaunce and hap.
1593 Hill's Profitable Arte Gardening (new ed.) 19 Seldome in other places the like hap correspondeth.
1645 J. Ussher Body of Divin. (1647) 50 Nothing semeth to passe by meer hap or chance.
1886 J. E. Jenkins Jobson's Enemies I. ii. 49 Now, as hap would have it, every word of the above conversation was overheard through the thin partition.
1888 Quiver May 504/2 By curious hap..[she] was actually located at ‘The Beeches’.
1903 G. Egremont Verse 214 As hap would have, My lord and I nigh home had fallen in With old Bontaine, the town chirurgeon.
1913 E. B. Andrews Call of Land xiii. 275 It is not by mere hap that business pioneering has fallen into promoters' hands.

Phrases

P1.
a. by (good, lucky, etc.) hap: by chance, casually; (also) perhaps. Occasionally also by haps. Cf. haply adv.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [adverb]
feringc1000
feringlya1300
by casec1300
chancefully1303
lotc1325
peradventurec1325
of chance1330
happilya1375
in hapa1375
upon hapsa1375
casuallyc1384
perchancec1387
chancely1389
by fortune1390
haplyc1390
by (also of) adventurea1393
percasea1393
adventurelyc1400
percase1402
accidently?a1425
adventurously1440
by (good, lucky, etc.) hap?a1450
accidentally1528
chanceably1559
bechance1569
chance1595
casual-wise1601
accidental1622
occasionally1622
fortuitouslya1652
contingently1668
by chance1669
chanceable1709
per-hazard1788
chance-wise1844
?a1450 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (BL Add. 12056) (1894) 66 (MED) Þenne by hap [a1400 Ashm. by grace] sum grete drope of blod may be congelyde togedre.
1533 T. More Confutation Barnes in Wks. 775/1 Yf it fortuned them to fal vppon it by happe.
1571 T. Hill Contempl. Mankinde xiii. f. 27v A certaine Almayne..espied on a time by happe, a bodye Lowse creeping on his hose.
1600 W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing iii. i. 105 Louing goes by haps . View more context for this quotation
1642 T. Fuller Holy State iii. xii. 181 They must needs hit the mark sometimes, though not by aim, by hap.
1708 E. Cooke Sot-weed Factor 3 We paddled to the other side: Where being Landed safe by hap, As Sol fell into Thetis Lap.
1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. (at cited word) By good hap we jis meet'n eens he was a comin out.
1908 T. Phillips Eric Strong xvii. 173 One summer holiday, when Eric, quite by hap, overheard his mother praying.
1985 R. Curtis & B. Elton Blackadder II in R. Curtis et al. Blackadder: Whole Damn Dynasty (1998) 178/2 By lucky hap, it's just over a thousand methinks, and has for years been hidden beyond the wit of any thief.
b. Similarly through (good) hap, in hap (also in haps), upon hap (also upon haps). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > [adverb]
feringc1000
feringlya1300
by casec1300
chancefully1303
lotc1325
peradventurec1325
of chance1330
happilya1375
in hapa1375
upon hapsa1375
casuallyc1384
perchancec1387
chancely1389
by fortune1390
haplyc1390
by (also of) adventurea1393
percasea1393
adventurelyc1400
percase1402
accidently?a1425
adventurously1440
by (good, lucky, etc.) hap?a1450
accidentally1528
chanceably1559
bechance1569
chance1595
casual-wise1601
accidental1622
occasionally1622
fortuitouslya1652
contingently1668
by chance1669
chanceable1709
per-hazard1788
chance-wise1844
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 1829 Þei þat misseden here mete wold make gret noyse..so þat we miȝt þurȝth hap haue harm in þat wise.
a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Josh. xiv. 12 If in hap the Lord is with me, and Y mai do hem awei, as he bihiȝte to me.
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) l. 4936 Þou sall here apon happis..Þat neuire hathill vndire heuen herd bot þi-selfe.
?1499 (?a1440) S. Winter tr. St. Ierom (de Worde) sig. Biii A merueylous thyng and in happes not seyn to fore thre daies of fastynge and prayers.
1590 R. Wilson Three Lordes & Three Ladies London sig. f4 Therfore here will I stay sure, to keepe what I haue, rather than be a traitor vpon hap.
1625 J. Hart Anat. Urines ii. xi. 122 One may through hap..hit the naile on the head.
1723 Coll. Old Ballads II. 63 Through good Hap, at last she then decreed, To seek in fruitful Germany Some Succour to this Need.
a1838 J. Fitchett King Alfred (1842) VI. xlvii. 413 A zealous friend to royal Alfred hastes..Bearing intelligence of late mischance Occurr'd through hap of fight to Cornwall's chief.
P2. in hap (of): in case (of). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > possibility > lest [conjunction]
in case1357
anauntera1387
in (also for, on, upon) adventurea1393
in hap (of)a1400
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Trin. Cambr.) l. 6801 In happe he haþ on bat nor bed Cloþ to hule him but þat wed.
a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Dan. iv. 24 In hap [c1384 E.V. perauenture; L. forsitan] God schal forȝyue thi trespassis.
1573 G. Gascoigne Hundreth Sundrie Flowres 321 God knoweth I wish it not, it had ben bet for mee: Still to haue kept my quiet chayre in hap of high degree.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

hapn.2

Brit. /hap/, U.S. /hæp/, Scottish English /hap/, Irish English /hæp/
Forms: 1700s– hap; also Scottish pre-1700 happs (plural).
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: hap v.2
Etymology: < hap v.2
Scottish, Irish English, and English regional (northern).
A covering of any kind, esp. of rough material; spec. a wrap, shawl, or other covering for (part of the) body; a coverlet. Cf. hip hape n. at hip n.1 Compounds 5a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > [noun] > a covering
wrielsc825
coverc1320
hillingc1325
eyelida1382
covering1382
casea1398
coverta1400
tegumentc1440
hacklea1450
coverturec1450
housingc1450
deck1466
heeler1495
housera1522
coverlet1551
shrouda1561
kever1570
vele1580
periwig1589
hap1593
opercle1598
integument?1611
blanketa1616
cask1646
operiment1650
coverlid1654
tegment1656
shell?1677
muff1687
operculum1738
tegmen1807
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > outerwear > [noun]
robesc1330
overclothing1425
out-clothing1496
shaping apparel1564
outside1600
out-garment1634
out-dressa1637
out-array1647
superinvestiture1681
overclothes1824
outer clothing1841
hap1868
outerwear1883
overwear1885
shaping clothes1894
outwear1935
1593 in W. J. Duncan Misc. Papers Reigns Queen Mary & James VI (1834) 136 King James the fourth gave rich happs, and other costly ornaments.
1724 A. Ramsay Tea-table Misc. (new ed.) I. 59 Hap me with thy petticoat... Grant me for a Hap that charming Petticoat of thine.
1787 R. Burns Poems (new ed.) 68 When the stacks get on their winter-hap.
a1837 R. Nicoll Poems (1842) 17 We'll a' go pu' the heather—Our byres are a' to theek: Unless the peat-stack get a hap, We'll a' be smoored wi' reek.
1868 J. C. Atkinson Gloss. Cleveland Dial. Haps, over-clothes; rugs, shawls, great coats, etc.
1897 Shetland News 28 Aug. 8/1 Wi' a hap o' Sibbie 's an' my muckle blue lit froke inunder her head an' shooders.
1933 J. Grigsby Island Rooing 40 Dressed entirely in black save for the brown woollen ‘hap’ which is common with all Shetland country women.
1964 New Shetlander No. 70. 27 She wuir a hap, rob cott an bratt.
1987 J. J. Graham Shadowed Valley ii. 15 A short, plump, rosy-cheeked woman bustled in unwrapping a moorit hap from head and shoulders.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

hapn.3

Brit. /hap/, U.S. /hæp/
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: happening n.
Etymology: Shortened < happening n.
U.S. slang (chiefly in African-American usage).
With the. The latest events or information; the news. Usually in plural, esp. in what's the haps?
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > information > [noun] > new
news1532
noos1862
hap1957
update1967
1957 Salina (Kansas) Jrnl. 3 May 3/2 Hey girls, what's the haps on this newfangled, extended rocket ship?
1970 A. Young Snakes i. vii. 35 I like to run over here to the Greystone sometime and check out the haps.
1988 P. Tysver in Quarterly (U.S.) Spring 85 I went, Hey, what's the hap? The Potato went, Nothing. Bored.
1992 ‘Ice Cube’ et al. It Was Good Day (song) in Hip-hop & Rap (2003) 219 Went to Short Dog's house, they was watchin' ‘Yo! MTV Raps!’ What's the haps on the craps?
2001 Village Voice (N.Y.) 27 Nov. 88/7 [The website] has details on all the haps.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

hapv.1

Brit. /hap/, U.S. /hæp/
Forms: Middle English appe, Middle English hopp (perhaps transmission error), Middle English–1500s hape, Middle English–1600s happe, Middle English– hap.
Origin: Probably formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: hap n.1
Etymology: Probably < hap n.1, although compare the verbs in the Scandinavian languages cited at that entry and see note below.It has been suggested that earlier currency of the verb is perhaps shown by the following isolated attestation of an Old English (late West Saxon) past tense singular hæpte , of uncertain sense, assuming it is to be taken as representing an otherwise unattested Class I weak verb Old English *hæppan in the sense ‘to go by chance, to move accidentally’ (compare sense 4). However the context, which refers to the miraculous disappearance of a sword, more specifically suggests a sense ‘to slip’ or ‘to jump’, and later use in sense 4 does not appear to show any clear parallels to this particular use or construction:OE Ælfric Lives of Saints (Julius) (1900) II. 250 Þa sloh sum hæþen man to þam halgan were, ac mid þam swenge hæpte þæt swurd him of handum.Even if the Old English verb indeed shows a derivative of the same Germanic base (which in Old English is otherwise only attested in a different sense: see hap n.1), it remains uncertain whether there is any continuity with later Middle English use.
Now regional and archaic.
1. intransitive. To have or enjoy luck (of a specified kind); to fare (well or badly). Also with non-referential it as subject. Obsolete. what haps it?: what does it achieve, what good does it do?
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > occurrence > [verb (intransitive)] > fare or get on
wharvec888
timea1325
hapc1350
chancea1533
the world > existence and causation > existence > state or condition > be or remain in specific state or condition [verb (intransitive)] > fare or get on
farec1000
chevec1300
timea1325
do1340
hapc1350
thrive?a1366
ferea1375
walka1400
chevise14..
fortunea1513
tidec1540
fend1781
go1920
the world > action or operation > doing > a proceeding > proceed or carry on an action [verb (intransitive)] > get on well or badly
farec1000
speeda1122
wendc1325
hapc1350
wieldc1384
frame1509
shift?1533
to make out1776
to get on1861
c1350 in London Mediaeval Stud. (1951) 2 45 (MED) Al my Rout ryot nys nout wor a ruch setthen I hosbonde bycom—wat happed hit to telle?
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) l. 3340 Ȝe wite þei do wrong, þe worse schul þei happe.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. iii. l. 284 Riȝte as agag hadde, happe [c1390 Vernon A. iii. l. 266 hapne] shul somme.
c1450 (a1375) Octavian (Calig.) (1979) l. 1437 Þorȝ Godes grace well he hapte.
1534 tr. Erasmus Bellum Erasmi f. 19 O good lorde, what may we saye happeth well and luckely in warre?
1581 W. Elderton New Ballad (single sheet) No no quoth Browne I will not be A Traitour for all Christiantie, Happe well or woe, it shall not be so.
1601 J. Marston et al. Iacke Drums Entertainm. iii. sig. F3 Your ship (the Hope-well) hath hapt ill, returning from Barbary.
1692 R. Ames Jacobite Conventicle 5 Leading me such a dainty jaunt, As if one on an Errand sent, Missing his way, which did not hap well.
1860 W. G. Simms Areytos 308 With the priestess herself so angelic, Having lips so persuasive, 'twill hap ill.
2. intransitive. To come about by chance; to happen, come to pass, occur. Formerly sometimes with be (rather than have) as auxiliary. Cf. happen v. 1.
a. With the action expressed by a clause or infinitive typically following the verb, usually impersonalor with non-referential it as subject.
(a) With indirect object expressing the person affected by an occurrence. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) l. 1635 (MED) To schewe to þe þorw my sawe how þat ous is hapid.
c1430 (c1386) G. Chaucer Legend Good Women (Cambr. Gg.4.27) (1879) l. 634 In the se it happede hem to mete.
a1450 Generides (Pierpont Morgan) (1865) l. 5577 If any thing hap him amys.
1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure xvi. xxx It may me happe a remedy to fynde.
1533 T. More Debellacyon Salem & Bizance Pref. p. iii How it happed me to fall in hand therwyth, and to spende and lese a lytell tyme about it, to make the mater the more playne vnto you.
(b) Without indirect object. Now rare.
ΚΠ
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1874) V. 461 (MED) ‘I praye God þat þis honde nevere wexe olde’; and so it happede.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. vi. l. 47 Wel may happe in heuene, Þat he worth worthier sette.
a1413 (c1385) G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde (Pierpont Morgan) (1882) v. l. 796 Happe how happe may. Al sholde I deye .I. wole here herte seche.
1523 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles I. lxxvi. 97 It happed so well for hym, that it rayned all night.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 116v Aas hit happit of þes hynd herkyn a while.
?a1560 in T. Wright Songs & Ballads Reign Philip & Mary (1860) 2 For nowe is hapt that I fearedde least.
c1600 (c1350) Alisaunder (Greaves) (1929) l. 521 A lioun..may lightlych drive Of hertes an holle herde, as happes ilome.
1613 W. B. tr. S. Michaelis Admirable Hist. Penitent Woman 316 I regard it not as long as I do my duety, and for the time to come, let it hap as hap will.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) iv. v. 33 Then wherefore should I doubt: Hap what hap may, Ile roundly goe about her. View more context for this quotation
1808 W. Scott Marmion iii. xiv. 146 Thus oft it haps, that..A feather daunts the brave.
1889 E. Peacock Gloss. Words Manley & Corringham, Lincs. (ed. 2) 257 Hap. v., to happen. If it haps to raain I shan't goä.
1949 A. Ogle Trag. Lollards' Tower ii. 40 Mary, quod he, it happed that a young priest very devoutly in a procession bare a candle before the cross for lying with a wench.
1995 M. Frayn in Guardian 19 Apr. a10/2 Then murmureth the prophet unto himself... It may hap that we are entering upon a time of prosperity and sustained growth without concomitant inflation.
b. With simple subject.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > chance [verb (intransitive)] > come about by chance
alimpOE
fallc1175
fortunec1369
chance1393
hapa1398
to fall profitc1475
adventurec1540
to fall out1556
befall1591
befortunea1616
happen1833
random1921
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add. 27944) (1975) I. v. ii. 171 Suche euel schape..happiþ seelde in wymmen.
1490 W. Caxton tr. Foure Sonnes of Aymon (1885) iii. 86 Theyr fayne aventure that was happed to theym that daye.
1509 J. Fisher Mornynge Remembraunce Countesse of Rychemonde (de Worde) sig. Biv v Ye perylles..whiche dayly..myght haue happed vnto her.
a1677 I. Barrow Serm. Several Occasions (1678) 87 What can hap to him worthy to be deemed evil?
1880 Ld. Tennyson Battle of Brunanburh xv Never had huger Slaughter of heroes..Hapt in this isle.
a1916 J. Todhunter tr. J. W. von Goethe Faust (1924) xxi. 163 Dear Aunt! you are behind the times, one sees, What's done has hapt, what's hapt is done!
1931 J. Stephens Strict Joy 8 This happed, because all things transfer From what they seem to that they truly are.
3. intransitive. To have the (good) fortune or luck (to do something, or that something is the case); (in later use also) to happen, chance (without necessarily implying good fortune). Cf. happen v. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > chance [verb (intransitive)] > chance to be or do
hapa1393
happena1393
happenc1450
fortune1454
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) viii. l. 1127 (MED) Who that happeth hir to finde..do so that sche be begrave With this tresor.
c1400 (?a1387) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Huntington HM 137) (1873) C. xii. l. 114 Yf þou happe..þat þow hitte on clergie.
?a1450 tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (BL Add. 12056) (1894) 100 Ofte tymes alle þese causes happe [a1400 Ashm. happen] to come togedres.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 34v Thow se not þat sothely said ys of olde And oft happes to hit qwo so hede tas.
1566 T. Stapleton Returne Vntruthes Jewelles Replie iv. 55 If the Skie fal, we may happe to catche Larkes.
1612 M. Drayton Poly-olbion i. 9 He of the race of Troy a remnant hapt to find.
1627 T. Newman Eunuch v. ix. 109 And for the feare that she may happe to loue him, That's needelesse: you may pelt him out at pleasure.
1714 J. Gay Shepherd's Week iv. 8 A maiden fine bedight he hapt to love.
1790 D. Morison Poems 109 Ae day last week..She happ'd by chance to streek the wheel.
1815 W. Scott Lord of Isles iii. xiii. 98 Where'er I happ'd to roam.
1892 W. Carleton City Festivals 112 By night and day he swims, they say, Wherever he haps to please.
1907 Country Life 9 Feb. 194/1 'Twas a piece of luck that he hapt to come down along just then!
4.
a. intransitive. To happen or come upon (also on) by chance. Cf. happen v. 3.
ΘΚΠ
the world > existence and causation > causation > chance or causelessness > chance [verb (intransitive)]
fallc1175
hapa1393
luckc1438
happenc1450
chance1536
to chop upon1555
hazard1575
alight1591
chop1652
lucken1674
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) v. l. 2336 If ye happe therupon, Ye schull be riche men for evere.
c1460 (?c1400) Tale of Beryn Prol. l. 632 (MED) As he souȝt his logging, he appid oppon a whelp That lay vndir a steyir.
1548 W. Patten Exped. Scotl. sig. C.viijv Whose grace..had hapt vpon a fellowe lyke a man.
1611 D. Murray Tragicall Death Sophonisba sig. B7v Vnlesse thou hap vpon some homely cell, Where Pilgrims haunt and hoary Hermits dwel.
1718 F. Hutchinson Hist. Ess. conc. Witchcraft xv. 214 He chanced to hap upon a Boy.
1855 R. Browning Fra Lippo Lippi in Men & Women I. 35 Whatever rat, there, haps on his wrong hole, And nip each softling of a wee white mouse.
a1896 W. Morris Coll. Wks. (1914) XXI. 337 He raised his head And dim-eyed looked about the place Until he happed upon my face.
1920 C. Coltman-Rogers Conifers iii. 117 You do not often hap upon a student of wood values and a devotional lover of viols combined in one and the same personality.
1999 Guardian Weekly 14 Mar. 16/5 In the course of trying to track down a pianist who has disappeared, he haps upon some not very sexually correct mysteries.
b. intransitive. With other constructions: to come or go by chance. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1603 M. Drayton Barrons Wars v. xl. 111 Thus art thou hap'd into thy earthly hell.
1618 Record's Ground of Arts (new ed.) 181 I haue a general rule for the Fraction that may hap in this work.
1680 T. Blood Narr. conc. Design against Duke Buckingham 20 He took occasion of going to Long-Acre, and happing in hard by the Place where Mrs. Stringer and Monk lived.
1762 S. Foote Orators ii. 56 Was it yourself that was happing about here but now.
5. intransitive. Perhaps: to accept one's luck or fortune. Obsolete. rare.The first occurrence of hap in quot. 1575 may alternatively simply show sense 2a(b) in an elaboration of the phrase hap that hap may (cf. quots. a1413, a1616 at sense 2a(b)).
ΚΠ
1575 R. B. Apius & Virginia sig. Eij Therefore hap, and be happely, hap that hap may.

Derivatives

happing adj. Obsolete that occurs by chance, fortuitous; occasional.
ΚΠ
1593 Queen Elizabeth I tr. Boethius De Consolatione Philosophiæ (P.R.O.: SP 12/289) i. pr. vi. f. 22v Thinkes thou that this world is wheeled by rash & happing chaunce [L. fortuitisque casibus]?
a1625 (a1598) A. Montgomerie Flyting with Polwart (Harl.) in Poems (1910) 171 With..happing hairs blowin withershines Aback.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

hapv.2

Brit. /hap/, U.S. /hæp/, Scottish English /hap/, Irish English /hæp/
Forms: Middle English–1600s happe, Middle English– hap, 1500s hop, 1800s– happ; also Scottish 1700s 1900s– haped (past participle), 1800s– haup.
Origin: Of uncertain origin.
Etymology: Origin uncertain; it has been suggested that this word may represent an alteration of lap v.2 after Anglo-Norman and Middle French happer hap v.3 (compare also verbs in Germanic languages cited at that entry), but this is difficult to substantiate. The regional distribution of this word has alternatively been taken to suggest a Scandinavian origin, although no likely etymon has been identified.
Scottish, Irish English, and English regional (chiefly northern).
1. transitive. To wrap a garment (also bedding, etc.) round (a person), esp. for warmth; (also) to tuck up (in bed). Also in figurative contexts. In modern use frequently with up.Also intransitive with reflexive meaning.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > providing with clothing > provide with clothing [verb (transitive)] > in specific way > other
wear?c1225
wear?c1225
wear?a1366
hapc1390
to-ragc1430
to make up1593
puppet1635
to set out1688
undress1818
overclothe1819
toilet1842
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > cover [verb (transitive)] > spread or draw over (a thing) as covering for
tighta1000
hapc1390
to draw abroada1400
to draw over ——a1500
superducea1500
induce1567
overhale1579
bespread1598
strew?1615
superinduce1616
obducea1676
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > wrapping > wrap [verb (transitive)]
bewindOE
writheOE
windc1175
bewrap?c1225
lapa1300
umbelaya1300
umbeweave1338
wlappec1380
enwrapa1382
wrapa1382
inlap1382
envelop1386
forwrapc1386
hapc1390
umbeclapa1400
umbethonrea1400
umblaya1400
wapc1420
biwlappea1425
revolve?a1425
to roll up?a1425
roll?c1425
to roll ina1475
wimple1513
to wind up?1533
invest1548
circumvolve1607
awrap1609
weave1620
sheet1621
obvolve1623
embowdle1625
amict1657
wry1674
woold1775
overwrap1815
wrapper1885
wrapper1905
weve-
c1390 Talkyng of Love of God (Vernon) (1950) 60 (MED) Heo openeþ hire Mantel, þat ladi so kuynde, and happeþ vs þer under.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) l. 6802 He has nouþer on bac nor bedd, Clath to hap him.
a1400 (c1300) Northern Homily: Archbishop & Nun (Coll. Phys.) in Middle Eng. Dict. at Happen A womman..bar a child in hir arm, In swethel cloutes happid [c1390 Vernon I-wrapped] warm.
?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) (1996) i. l. 8902 He gaf him drynk poysoun, happed him warme & bad him slepe.
1465 J. Paston in Paston Lett. & Papers (2004) I. 140 Worsted for doblettes to happe me this cold wynter.
1551 R. Robinson tr. T. More Vtopia ii. sig. Jiv If he had them he should not be the better hapt or couered from colde.
1591 ‘A. Foulweather’ Wonderfull Astrol. Prognostication 21 [He] shall hop a harlot in his clothes all the yere after.
1647 H. More Philos. Poems i. i. xxiv A lucid purple mantle in the West Doth close the day, and hap the Sun at rest.
1673 J. Ray N. Countrey Words in Coll. Eng. Words 23 To Happe, to cover for warmth.
1724 A. Ramsay Tea-table Misc. (new ed.) I. 59 (title) Hap me with thy Petticoat.
1754 R. Forbes Shop Bill in tr. Ovid Ajax his Speech (new ed.) 34 Gloves likewise, to hap the hand of fremt an' sib.
1863 Mrs. Toogood Specim. Yorks. Dial. Hap up the children well in bed, it's varry cold.
1866 C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake II. v. 80 His chaplain hapt him up in bed.
1916 G. Eyre-Todd Angel of R. Burns i. 29 How far away now seems the time when I was a bairn myself, when my mother happed me in at night, and I slept without care or fear.
1941 N. M. Gunn Silver Darlings xi. 231 She removed the soiled gown and special bed-cloth and washed Kirsty's mouth and body tenderly but firmly, then happed her warmly.
2000 M. Fitt But n Ben A-go-go v. 38 Hap up weel, young man, his Realschule teachers had aye tellt him.
2.
a. transitive. More generally: to cover (something), esp. with a layer or wrapping; to cover up or over; to enfold or shield.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > covering > cover [verb (transitive)] > cover over or up
bitheccheOE
bewrya1000
overheleOE
becoverc1325
overcovera1382
overhillc1390
hapc1400
whelvec1440
bield?1507
to cover over1530
obrute1542
overdight1581
whave1674
tile1719
beshroud1847
to cover up1872
c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) l. 626 (MED) Þre mettez of mele menge, and ma kakez, Under askez ful hote happe hem bylive.
1494 Lydgate's Falle of Princis (Pynson) iii. sig. mviiv Though his chestys happed be with golde With yron barrys fast shet and closed.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 203v Ffund a bag full bret..Happit at þe hede of his hegh bed.
?1553 (c1501) G. Douglas Palice of Honour (London) Prol. l. 38 in Shorter Poems (1967) 10 The dasy and the Maryguld onlappit Quhilkis all the nicht lay with thair leuis happit.
1570 P. Levens Manipulus Vocabulorum sig. Ci/1 To Happe, couer.
1575 J. Rolland Treat. Court Venus i. f. 8 With hir awin hand scho happis me.
1718 in C. A. Malcom Minutes Justices of Peace Lanarkshire (1931) 228 The foresaid pair of blankets..was found hid in a heather bush haped into a leather apron.
1786 R. Burns Poems II. 184 Jamaica bodies, use him weel, An' hap him in a cozie biel [= shelter].
1813 J. Hogg Queen's Wake ii. xiii. 179 Her bosom happed wi' the flowerits gay.
1891 ‘L. Keith’ Halletts II. ix. 189 How softly they [sc. leaves] fell and happed the graves!
1932 ‘L. G. Gibbon’ Sunset Song iii. 138 Father himself was there in that dark box heaped with the little flowers that folk had sent, father whom they were to leave here happed in red clay.
2000 M. Fitt But n Ben A-go-go v. 39 Scars fae auld ops happed his airms an back like bleared tattoos.
b. transitive. figurative and in extended use. In early use: esp. to bind. Now rare.
ΚΠ
c1400 (?c1390) Sir Gawain & Green Knight (1940) l. 655 His clannes & his cortaysye croked were neuer, & pite, þat passeȝ alle poynteȝ,—þyse pure fyue Were harder happed on þat haþel þen on any oþer.
tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) iii. l. 214 This sk[e]p vnto the tre thow bynde & happe.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy (2002) f. 141 What wildnes or worship waknet my hert ffor to hap hir in hert þat hates my seluyn.
1576 G. Gascoigne Complaynt of Phylomene in Steele Glas sig. N.ij Stonie walles Which fast (in hold) hir hapt.
1607 Dobsons Drie Bobbes sig. D2 With many a lusty blowe he happed his mistris about the shoulders, notwithstanding that shee entreated him to stay his handes and not to beate her.
1768 A. Ross Fortunate Shepherdess i. 13 Our house is happed, an' our mailen paid.
1896 E. H. Hickey Poems 14 Oh, let me..sing my songs With Eochaid's love happed warm about my breast.
2012 J. M. Tuccelli Glow 149 She tickled my nose with a tail of pine and happed my face with her kisses.

Derivatives

happed adj.
ΚΠ
a1642 H. Best Farming & Memorandum Bks. (1984) 19 Well happed sheepe are the best for an hard faugh.
1882 ‘S. Tytler’ Sc. Marriages III. xii. 199 I think I never knew before what cold meant. Will you take me into your room or let me sit by the ‘happed’ kitchen fire?
1933 ‘L. G. Gibbon’ Cloud Howe iii. 170 She's a well-happèd quean, Else Queen, I should think.
2006 S. Blackhall Heavenly Cow of Thebes 13 Fan her lord [sc. Caesar] Dee'd, as the happed assassins planned, Beauty wis eeseless.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

hapv.3

Forms: 1500s–1600s happe, 1600s–1700s hap.
Origin: Probably a borrowing from French. Etymon: French happer.
Etymology: Probably < Anglo-Norman and Middle French, French happer to grab, seize suddenly and forcibly (1193–7 as haper in Old French), (of an animal) to snap, bite (c1200), (of a mechanical device, trap, etc.) to snap shut on, catch, seize (something) (1275–80), in Anglo-Norman in legal use in senses ‘to take possession of, appropriate’ and ‘to arrest’ (both early 14th cent.), probably ultimately of imitative origin. Compare Dutch happen to seize, grasp (1588), to snap, bite, grab with the mouth (1618), German regional (Low German) happen to seize, Danish happe , hjappe to grab with the mouth, snap at, bite, seize, grab, stutter (c1700) and also earlier happer v.1 and forms in Germanic languages cited at that entry. The precise relationship between the French and Germanic verbs is uncertain.
Obsolete.
transitive. To take, esp. suddenly and forcibly; to seize. Also: to trap (an animal).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > seizing > seize [verb (transitive)]
gripea900
afangOE
to lay hands (or hand) on or upon (also in, to)OE
repeOE
atfonga1000
keepc1000
fang1016
kip1297
seize1338
to seize on or upon1399
to grip toc1400
rapc1415
to rap and rendc1415
comprise1423
forsetc1430
grip1488
to put (one's) hand(s) on (also in, to, unto, upon)1495
compass1509
to catch hold1520
hap1528
to lay hold (up)on, of1535
seisin?c1550
cly1567
scratch1582
attach1590
asseizea1593
grasp1642
to grasp at1677
collar1728
smuss1736
get1763
pin1768
grabble1796
bag1818
puckerow1843
nobble1877
jump1882
snaffle1902
snag1962
pull1967
1528–30 tr. T. Littleton Tenures (new ed.) f. xxxii The feoffour entreth & happyth the possessyon of the dede polle.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Happer, to hap, or catch; to snatch or graspe at.
a1625 H. Finch Law (1627) i. iii. 30 The Lord that first can happe the Wardship of his heire, shall haue it.
1670 T. Blount Νομο-λεξικον: Law-dict. Hap, she that has most of the Land, charges her Land to the other, and she happeth the rent, she shall maintain Assise without specialty.
1754 A. Hendry Jrnl. 26–7 Dec. in Trans. Royal Soc. Canada (1907) 1 344 I asked the Natives why they did not Hap wolves.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online June 2021).

hapv.4

Brit. /hap/, U.S. /hæp/, Scottish English /hap/, Irish English /hæp/
Forms: 1700s hape, 1700s–1800s hap, 1800s haup, 1800s hawp, 1800s hep, 1800s hop, 1900s– happ.
Origin: Probably an imitative or expressive formation.
Etymology: Probably imitative of a call to attract attention; compare hup int., hup vb. at hup int. Derivatives, hut int., etc. Compare also gee int.1
Scottish and Irish English (northern).
intransitive. Of draught animals: to turn to the right (when directed). Frequently in imperative as a call to such animals to turn to the right. Also transitive with the draught animals as object. Opposed to wind v.1 9. Cf. hup int. (b). to hap or to wind: to (cause to) turn to the right or left, as desired; also figurative, frequently in negative contexts. Sc. National Dict. (at cited word) records the word as still in use in Stirlingshire in 1949 and (in the phrase to hap or to wind) in Wigtownshire in 1956.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > driving or operating a vehicle > drive a vehicle [verb (transitive)] > drive a horse-drawn vehicle > direct horses in specific way
hap1723
winda1745
hup1823
gee1845
1723 W. Meston Knight i. 25 But he could make them turn or veer, And hap or weind them by the Ear.
1794 W. Scott Let. 5 Sept. (1932) I. 36 In carters phrase [she] would neither hap nor wynd till she got rid of him.
1809 R. Kerr Agric. Surv. Berwick xviii. 503 Formerly, in speaking to their horses, carters employed hap and wind in ordering them to either side, now mostly high-wo and jee.
1838 J. Howell in Wilson’s Hist. Tales Borders (1857) V. 254 Hap, Bassie! hap! And, smacking his whip the horse increased its speed.
a1902 J. Heughan tr. Virgil in Gallovidian (1913) Autumn 108/2 Dinna sotter in Their waesome plicht wha happ and wyne wi' sin.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2013; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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