Find the word definition

Crossword clues for occasion

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
occasion
I.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a sense of occasion (=a feeling that an event is special or important)
▪ It was a marvellous day and there was a real sense of occasion.
formal occasions
▪ I’ve met her twice but only on formal occasions.
mark...occasion
▪ Mrs Lawson was presented with a gold watch to mark the occasion.
momentous occasion
▪ His colleagues all recognized that this was a momentous occasion.
numerous occasions
▪ The two leaders have worked together on numerous occasions.
rare occasions
▪ I only saw Helen on the rare occasions when I went into her shop.
special occasions
▪ The good china was used only on special occasions.
suit the occasion
▪ I thought a simple black dress would suit the occasion.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
different
▪ Sentences can therefore express different propositions on different occasions of use.
▪ On fourteen different occasions the Volunteer found the tires of his jeep either deflated or punctured.
▪ Even the same person reacts differently on different occasions, depending on how fit they are and on other circumstances at that time.
▪ Children received portions of the family property on different occasions over long periods of time.
▪ The specific policies and rhetoric have been different as the occasion demanded.
▪ To complicate matters, figures quoted on different occasions often disagreed.
▪ But, unknown to Mobuto, Ngune had tried on three different occasions to have Jamel killed.
▪ The relevant 1674 images show two different occasions, both courtly.
formal
▪ Hence peace-makings were solemn and formal occasions, committing groups of people to restraint.
▪ It is sung at family celebrations like this one, but also at more formal occasions.
▪ The rules are most useful on formal occasions like weddings, and particularly when they happen only once in a lifetime.
▪ Or rather, they photograph you only on formal occasions: birthdays, weddings, Christmas.
▪ As a result, social contacts were mainly peripheral, or occurred at formal social occasions.
numerous
▪ I have used this service for selling, although more so on the buying side, having been tempted on numerous occasions!
▪ Agents say they met on numerous occasions with Earp in his office in the boiler room.
▪ Since then, he has been late on numerous occasions and we believe his alcohol consumption has increased.
▪ The staff had heard it before on numerous occasions but nothing as severe or as noisy as on this particular night.
▪ He was extremely good-looking, and extremely charming, generous to his scout, and to Mr Bullins on numerous occasions.
▪ Belfast Crown Court heard that the couple's six-year relationship had been stormy and that they had hit each other on numerous occasions.
▪ Again in common with many ENs, I was unsuccessful on numerous occasions.
▪ He's been pictured prancing the night away with 26-year-old Joanne on numerous occasions.
odd
▪ On the odd occasion the jollities would get out of hand and the fists would fly.
▪ The odd moments and occasions were legion.
▪ Not on the odd occasion, but each time they took this fit.
▪ However, on the odd occasion that I purchase fish elsewhere, I do quarantine the fish for two weeks.
▪ The 69-year-old man, from Elsdon Street, handed over the cash on odd occasions over the past year.
only
▪ It was the only occasion I saw inside and it made me hungry to go again.
▪ The only occasion when you won't get far without it is when the deceased is being sent abroad.
▪ I had a fling with some one when I was at college, but that was the only occasion.
▪ Under the new system the centre-half's only occasion for going up-field was to force the attack to make up goals lost.
▪ This was the only occasion that the state made such a count.
▪ The only occasion when rail closures were raised in my time at the Transport Department was in the spring of 1981.
▪ Neckbands are I think the only occasion on which I estimate needles.
▪ On the only occasion he was beaten he finished a good third against older opposition in the Prix de l'Abbaye de Longchamp.
other
▪ The current classic paddle strokes are fine in certain circumstance but there are other occasions when different techniques are needed.
▪ Divisional Secretaries, please keep the magazine informed of meetings, dinners and any other occasion that your Division is involved in.
▪ However, there is on other occasions a remarkable similarity of techniques, of clothes and of weapons.
▪ On other occasions the encoding process might be the result of a great deal of consideration.
▪ This was not one of the women he had peeped at on other occasions.
▪ On other occasions we detect language which can only be that of James, the third-person narrator.
▪ Recalling how Meh'Lindi had been violated on that other occasion, Jaq feared for her sanity once her psychic hood was removed.
▪ There are other comparatively rare occasions when the seller's solicitors prepare the draft.
particular
▪ Although this particular occasion was rather marred by our mishap it was great to meet old friends again.
▪ But on one particular occasion, he greeted me by kissing my hand.
▪ It may be that a judge is well qualified to conduct enquiries to establish what took place on particular occasions.
▪ On any particular occasion of measurement, however, we are unable to predict which possibility will be realised.
▪ On that particular occasion matters went wrong.
▪ The reference of chair would therefore be a particular chair that is being identified on a particular occasion.
▪ On this particular occasion however, it is a nifty little flying saucer.
previous
▪ She has played the role on three previous occasions.
▪ Nurse Ian Ballantyne, 26, alleged that Mr Stockton had gone without his medicine on previous occasions.
▪ This time, as on many previous occasions, it didn't work out.
▪ That he had on previous occasions overcome his antipathy to women is suggested by remarks he made to others.
▪ On each previous occasion he had been acquitted on all charges.
▪ It was a procedure that had been carried out, albeit with some difficulty, on a number of previous occasions.
▪ You should tell the plaintiff anything that you know about the defendant's doctor from previous occasions.
rare
▪ So on the rare occasions they did report themselves in a State of Readiness they knew an Agile Blade was likely.
▪ Except for rare occasions, he gave up spying.
▪ My most pressing experience of Wigg as a tipster was on one of the rare occasions when I went to the Derby.
▪ On rare occasions, they preach.
▪ There are other comparatively rare occasions when the seller's solicitors prepare the draft.
▪ Several astronomers reported that, on rare occasions, they could see something akin to these canals.
▪ It was a rare occasion when the best able bodied and disabled athletes applauded each others talents.
▪ The rare person who on the rare occasion wants to be wholly neutral has to walk a tightrope.
separate
▪ The blips appeared on three separate occasions, and each time the lowest instrument showed the biggest jump.
▪ On two separate occasions I've heard her voice beyond the door.
▪ If the burial service follows a church service on a separate occasion, a fee will be charged.
▪ There are reasonable approximations of bicarbonate and alkali secretion for each subject on separate occasions.
▪ And that applied whether the words were spoken on separate occasions or all together.
▪ Patient isolates and control strains were coded and tested blind on at least two separate occasions.
social
▪ Apparently Mr Baker had met him on a social occasion, and had been impressed by his traditionalist views.
▪ This is my first social occasion in the village.
▪ Aim to make mealtimes and refreshment breaks social occasions.
▪ Hard work but just as much a social occasion for everyone to gather together.
▪ It was no longer a social occasion, or a family occasion - it was a holy occasion.
▪ Many felt this social occasion should be continued but perhaps in a different form.
▪ Mealtimes were not just for eating, but were important social occasions.
special
▪ Apart from special occasions, this completes the hotel picture.
▪ Are they going to be your serviceable everyday sets or only used on special occasions?
▪ Whether it's a power lunch or a romantic dinner, a meal at Cicada always feels like a special occasion.
▪ She would wear it for Chapel Anniversary, I would think, because that was a very special occasion in Baldersdale.
▪ Formerly it heralded special occasions and, it is said, will be blown to announce the coming of the Messiah.
▪ The week begun with Dalglish dominating Merseyside once again in the build up for this special occasion.
▪ He did not want anyone to think of this as a special occasion.
■ VERB
mark
▪ To mark the occasion Newtownards mayor Wilbert Magill will be officiating at the ceremony.
▪ He marked the occasion with a quiet dinner with Brand and teammate Cuttino Mobley.
▪ Clwyd's Euro Week starts today with a special edition of Clwyd Connections published to mark the occasion by the county council.
▪ The following books are either now in stores or will soon be released to mark the occasion.
▪ The 1992 Richmond Meet is being marked as a historic occasion by having the first female Meet president.
▪ Y., wore her Sunday best, a floral dress, to mark the occasion.
▪ It seemed not to seek to impose itself but merely to mark the occasion.
▪ Thirty-three years on, his fans gathered there to mark the occasion, and Aileen Taylor was with them.
remember
▪ I had only met her once before the film brought us together, but I remember the occasion well.
▪ I remember one occasion also when I was tracking an animal, a buffalo, with a Bushman.
▪ I can't confirm that but I do remember the one occasion that he missed his target.
▪ I actually remember one occasion when we did our three pieces before eight o'clock in the morning.
▪ He remembered an occasion about two months before.
▪ He remembered the occasion when they had paid a visit to St Whatever-it-was on Magdalen bridge in Oxford.
▪ I remember one occasion when I was about four years old.
▪ She could even remember the occasion when she had first lied as a little girl.
rise
▪ Which means that even the most delicate of dishes will rise to the occasion.
▪ Too many leaders, motivated by self-interest, had failed to rise to the occasion.
▪ As I say, it is the chorus which too often fails to rise to the occasion.
▪ Bench strength could be suspect, but it has risen to the occasion the past two playoff runs.
▪ Sunderland again rose to the occasion against better opposition and just about deserved to get the points to ease their relegation worries considerably.
▪ No doubt when money is required in the future Long Riston residents will rise to the occasion once more.
▪ Devastated by her husband's death, she was uncertain she could rise to the occasion.
▪ Yet they rose to the occasion.
use
▪ Will its foes use the occasion of Kabila s death to press home their advantage?
▪ There has been some speculation that Dole may use the occasion to announce some high-profile Cabinet appointments, should he be elected.
▪ Tuesday 15 April 1746 was Cumberland's twenty-fifth birthday and he used the occasion to give his troops a rest.
▪ The call for special deposits was used on fifteen occasions between June 1960 and the end of 1966.
▪ But Edwin Forrest used this occasion for his own ends.
▪ The daily Tageszeitung used the occasion to relaunch the debate about legalising the use of cannabis.
▪ Hariri, the prime minister, used the occasion to raise pledges of $ 3. 2 billion in contributions for reconstruction.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
festive occasion
▪ In Bali a cremation is a festive occasion, lavish and expensive.
▪ It was a festive occasion and the group had baked its own Communion bread.
▪ The Great Hall had been specially prepared for the festive occasion.
▪ The harvest, or vintage, is a family festive occasion.
rise to the occasion/challenge
▪ Barragan rose to the occasion and defeated his opponent.
▪ Naylor was one of those men who rise to the challenge of danger.
▪ The team rose to the challenge and fought back to produce another goal.
▪ We are calling on all our employees to rise to the occasion and become more efficient and productive.
▪ And Charles noted with relief how Alex was rising to the challenge.
▪ Bench strength could be suspect, but it has risen to the occasion the past two playoff runs.
▪ Of course, many princes rose to the challenge, but each lost his life in the quest.
▪ Rather than offer pure fantasy, the fashion gurus rose to the challenge of suggesting truly flattering, appropriate and stylish options.
▪ Sunderland again rose to the occasion against better opposition and just about deserved to get the points to ease their relegation worries considerably.
▪ The academic community was slower in rising to the challenge.
▪ Which means that even the most delicate of dishes will rise to the occasion.
▪ Who will rise to the challenge?
the odd occasion/day/moment/drink etc
▪ However, on the odd occasion that I purchase fish elsewhere, I do quarantine the fish for two weeks.
▪ Not on the odd occasion, but each time they took this fit.
▪ On the odd occasion the jollities would get out of hand and the fists would fly.
▪ This doesn't matter on the odd occasion; it is only a problem if it occurs regularly.
▪ We've been working on the Panch Chule expedition for a year, but it's just the odd day basically.
▪ We just used to banter, have the odd drink together, fool around in the snow.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ I've suggested that she should move on numerous occasions, but she never takes any notice.
▪ I remember Michael sleeping in your room on several occasions and mom not knowing about it.
▪ I went out and bought a new dress just for the occasion.
▪ It's our wedding anniversary next month, and we're having a party to celebrate the occasion.
▪ It was quite an occasion. All the local dignitaries were there, dressed in their finest clothes.
▪ On one occasion, Anna fainted while out shopping with friends.
▪ She had met Zahid on a previous occasion.
▪ She was saving four bottles of their best champagne for a special occasion.
▪ Thanksgiving is a really big occasion in the States.
▪ The witness said that on both occasions he noticed Davis because of his heavily tattooed arms.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As I say, it is the chorus which too often fails to rise to the occasion.
▪ Every new challenge puts all the resources of the communicator to the test, and most solutions belong to the occasion.
▪ I do not intend to follow that, because we shall have an opportunity to do so on another occasion.
▪ I had only met her once before the film brought us together, but I remember the occasion well.
▪ It was a useful occasion for an outing to visit the Casterton dig.
▪ The control subjects did not receive either placebo or loperamide oxide tablets but underwent an identical series of measurements on one occasion.
II.verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
assault
▪ He was charged with unlawfully and maliciously inflicting grievous bodily harm and with assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
▪ Taxi driver Mason admitted assault occasioning actual bodily harm on January 3 and arson between January 2 and 5.
▪ Section 47 creates the offence of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
▪ Garrington admitted assault occasioning actual bodily harm on Ian Dixon and he was fined £50.
▪ In March 1989 the police officer was served with summonses alleging two offences of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
▪ He also admitted assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
harm
▪ He was charged with unlawfully and maliciously inflicting grievous bodily harm and with assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
▪ Taxi driver Mason admitted assault occasioning actual bodily harm on January 3 and arson between January 2 and 5.
▪ Section 47 creates the offence of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
▪ Garrington admitted assault occasioning actual bodily harm on Ian Dixon and he was fined £50.
▪ In March 1989 the police officer was served with summonses alleging two offences of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
▪ In Spratt, though interpretations vary, the Court of Appeal seems to have required intentionally or recklessly occasioning actual bodily harm.
▪ He also admitted assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
festive occasion
▪ In Bali a cremation is a festive occasion, lavish and expensive.
▪ It was a festive occasion and the group had baked its own Communion bread.
▪ The Great Hall had been specially prepared for the festive occasion.
▪ The harvest, or vintage, is a family festive occasion.
the odd occasion/day/moment/drink etc
▪ However, on the odd occasion that I purchase fish elsewhere, I do quarantine the fish for two weeks.
▪ Not on the odd occasion, but each time they took this fit.
▪ On the odd occasion the jollities would get out of hand and the fists would fly.
▪ This doesn't matter on the odd occasion; it is only a problem if it occurs regularly.
▪ We've been working on the Panch Chule expedition for a year, but it's just the odd day basically.
▪ We just used to banter, have the odd drink together, fool around in the snow.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Milton's mismanagement of the company occasioned the loss of thousands of jobs.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As with so many things, I was ignorant of the conditions that occasioned change.
▪ For government was occasioned by the needs of capitalism and the acquisitive mentality which capitalism produced.
▪ The girl's solitary state occasioned a good deal of sympathy, and in some cases, even stronger feelings.
▪ The theological debates occasioned by this crisis of identity occupied the generation of Jerome and Augustine.
▪ Which occasioned even more horn blowing, and heads out the window shouting.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Occasion

Occasion \Oc*ca"sion\ ([o^]k*k[=a]"zh[u^]n), n. [F. occasion, L. occasio, fr. occidere, occasum, to fall down; ob (see Ob-) + cadere to fall. See Chance, and cf. Occident.]

  1. A falling out, happening, or coming to pass; hence, that which falls out or happens; occurrence; incident; event.

    The unlooked-for incidents of family history, and its hidden excitements, and its arduous occasions.
    --I. Taylor.

  2. A favorable opportunity; a convenient or timely chance; convenience.

    Sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me.
    --Rom. vii. 11.

    I'll take the occasion which he gives to bring Him to his death.
    --Waller.

  3. An occurrence or condition of affairs which brings with it some unlooked-for event; that which incidentally brings to pass an event, without being its efficient cause or sufficient reason; accidental or incidental cause.

    Her beauty was the occasion of the war.
    --Dryden.

  4. Need; exigency; requirement; necessity; as, I have no occasion for firearms.

    After we have served ourselves and our own occasions.
    --Jer. Taylor.

    When my occasions took me into France.
    --Burke.

  5. A reason or excuse; a motive; a persuasion. Whose manner was, all passengers to stay, And entertain with her occasions sly. --Spenser. On occasion,

    1. in case of need; in necessity; as convenience requires. ``That we might have intelligence from him on occasion,''
      --De Foe.

    2. occasionally; from time to time; now and then.

      Syn: Need; incident; use. See Opportunity.

Occasion

Occasion \Oc*ca"sion\ ([o^]k*k[=a]"zh[u^]n), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Occasioned ([o^]k*k[=a]"zh[u^]nd); p. pr. & vb. n. Occasioning.] [Cf. F. occasionner.] To give occasion to; to cause; to produce; to induce; as, to occasion anxiety.
--South.

If we inquire what it is that occasions men to make several combinations of simple ideas into distinct modes.
--Locke.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
occasion

late 14c., "opportunity; grounds for action, state of affairs that makes something else possible; a happening, occurrence," from Old French ochaison, ocasion "cause, reason, excuse, pretext; opportunity" (13c.) or directly from Latin occasionem (nominative occasio) "opportunity, appropriate time," in Late Latin "cause," from occasum, occasus, past participle of occidere "fall down, go down," from ob "down, away" (see ob-) + cadere "to fall" (see case (n.1)). The notion is of a "falling together," or juncture, of circumstances.

occasion

mid-15c., "to bring (something) about," from occasion (n.), or else from Old French occasionner "to cause," from Medieval Latin occasionare, from Latin occasionem (see occasion (n.)). Related: Occasioned; occasioning.

Wiktionary
occasion

n. 1 A favorable opportunity; a convenient or timely chance. (from 14th c.) 2 The time when something happens. vb. (context transitive English) To give occasion to; to cause; to produce; to induce; as, to occasion anxiety.

WordNet
occasion
  1. n. an event that occurs at a critical time; "at such junctures he always had an impulse to leave"; "it was needed only on special occasions" [syn: juncture]

  2. a vaguely specified social event; "the party was quite an affair"; "an occasion arranged to honor the president"; "a seemingly endless round of social functions" [syn: affair, social occasion, function, social function]

  3. reason; "there was no occasion for complaint"

  4. the time of a particular event; "on the occasion of his 60th birthday"

  5. an opportunity to do something; "there was never an occasion for her to demonstrate her skill"

occasion

v. give occasion to

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "occasion".

On this occasion it was unlocked, and Marian was about to rush forward in eager anticipation of a peep at its interior, when, child as she was, the reflection struck her that she would stand abetter chance of carrying her point by remaining perdue.

The laws which excuse, on any occasions, the ignorance of their subjects, confess their own imperfections: the civil jurisprudence, as it was abridged by Justinian, still continued a mysterious science, and a profitable trade, and the innate perplexity of the study was involved in tenfold darkness by the private industry of the practitioners.

Loiterers assembled, but no one came to draw the vehicle, and by degrees the dismal truth leaked out that the three coolies who had been impressed for the occasion had all absconded, and that four policemen were in search of them.

I had likewise occasion to become acquainted at the Venetian Embassy with a lady from Venice, the widow of an English baronet named Wynne.

The address in the commons was ultimately agreed to after a most acrimonious debate, protracted by the Irish members and their opponents far beyond the limits usual on such occasions.

Congress has not acted upon it and the Courts have had no occasion to adjudicate the point.

The hair was so acutely sensitive that the slightest touch occasioned severe pain at the roots.

While the lack of physical adaptitude may be the occasion of much suffering and unhappiness in such unions, especially on the part of the wife, being even productive of most serious local disease, and sometimes of sterility, it is in childbirth that the greatest risk and suffering is incurred.

His lordship adduced examples from history, to show that the principle of change had been often acknowledged, and the suffrage withdrawn and conferred on various occasions.

Tickets for the Knights to attend the final, formal, farewell banquet of the American Tonsil, Adenoid and Vas Deferens Society had been obtained for them, and Horsey wanted to make sure their appearance would bring prestige to the occasion.

On the 22nd of December, Lord John Russell rose to move the order of the day, for the house to resolve itself into a committee of supply, and at the same time took occasion to state that, although no measures could be taken by the house with regard to Canada, he nevertheless did not consider himself justified, in the actual condition of that province, to move the adjournment of the house beyond the 16th of January.

Normally the adjudication committee would have refused to allow them to withdraw, but I requested they bend the Rules on this one occasion.

The ex-Royal Family waved, each remembering happier occasions, wedding dresses, kisses, the cheers of the adoring crowds.

The centre did not on this as on several other occasions in the campaign make the mistake of advancing before the way had been prepared for it.

But Mortlake himself did not take up the silvery aeroplane on this occasion.