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  1. Dec 7, 2020 · 1660s, risque, "hazard, danger, peril, exposure to mischance or harm," from French risque (16c.), from Italian risco, riscio (modern rischio), from riscare "run into danger," a word of uncertain origin. The Englished spelling is recorded by 1728. Spanish riesgo and German Risiko.

    • Français (French)

      Signification de hazard: risque; Vers 1300, nom d'un jeu de...

    • 한국어 (Korean)

      hazard 뜻: 위험; 1300년경, 주사위 게임의 이름으로, 불확실한 기원을 가진 오래된 프랑스어...

    • Español (Spanish)

      c. 1300, nombre de un juego de dados, del Antiguo Francés...

    • Hazardous

      1580s, "venturesome;" 1610s, "perilous," from hazard (n.) +...

    • Haystack

      c. 1300, stak, "pile, heap, or group of things," especially...

    • Hay-Ride

      1759, "a journey on the back of a horse or in a vehicle,"...

    • Hazelnut

      a word or set of identical words with a wide range of...

    • Hayward

      proper name, from Old English hege-weard "guardian of the...

  2. Feb 4, 2023 · One theory is that hazard gained its French name when English knights traveling to the crusades moved through France with their addictive pastime (via Gambling Sites).

  3. Where does the word hazard come from? Earliest known use. Middle English. The earliest known use of the word hazard is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for hazard is from around 1300, in Havelok. hazard is a borrowing from French. Etymons: French hasard. See etymology.

  4. Jan 1, 2011 · The OED says about hazard: "The origin of the French word is uncertain, but its source was probably Arabic. According to William of Tyre, the game took its name from a castle called Hasart or Asart in Palestine, during the siege of which it was invented."

  5. OED's earliest evidence for hazard is from 1529, in a translation by Simon Fish, religious controversialist. It is also recorded as a noun from the Middle English period (1150—1500). hazard is formed within English, by conversion; partly modelled on a French lexical item.

  6. May 2, 2023 · More than a decade ago, as a precursor to performing the song concerned live, Richard Marx astonished a sold-out audience at his London’s Royal Albert Hall show by describing the 1992 worldwide chart-topper Hazard as “the dumbest, lamest thing” that he’d ever written.

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  8. The nameHazard” has its roots in the Old French word “hasard,” referring to a game of dice. The term itself is believed to have originated from the Arabic word “az-zahr,” meaning “die” or “chance.”

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