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Origin and history of mayhap

mayhap(adv.)

"it may happen, perhaps," 1530s, from phrase (it) may hap (q.v.).

Entries linking to mayhap

c. 1200, "chance, a person's luck, fortune, fate;" also "unforeseen occurrence," from Old Norse happ "chance, good luck," from Proto-Germanic *hap- (source of Old English gehæp "convenient, fit"), from PIE *kob- "to suit, fit, succeed" (source also of Sanskrit kob "good omen; congratulations, good wishes," Old Irish cob "victory," Norwegian heppa "lucky, favorable, propitious," Old Church Slavonic kobu "fate, foreboding, omen"). Meaning "good fortune" in English is from early 13c. Old Norse seems to have had the word only in positive senses.

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    Trends of mayhap

    adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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