haply
adv/ˈhæpli/
Etymology
Inherited from Middle English happely, hapliche, happeliche; equivalent to hap + -ly.
- inherited from happely
Definitions
By accident or luck.
- But as soon as her son espied her, bowl in hand, he thought that haply something untoward had befallen her, but he would not ask of aught until such time as she had set down the bowl, when she acquainted him with that which had occurred[…]
Perhaps
Perhaps; by chance.
- "O my lord the Sultan," said the other [the Wazir], "verily women be weakly of wits, and haply this goodwife cometh hither to complain before thee against her goodman or some of her people."
- "Ha," quoth he to himself, "I will go and inquire into this business, for it may haply be that yonder black knight shall not find it to be so easy to deal with a knight of the Round Table as with those other three knights."
- Arise, and lift up your voices, that haply they that are fast asleep may be awakened.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for haply. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA