noun, verb, chanced, chanc⋅ing, adjective | 1. | the absence of any cause of events that can be predicted, understood, or controlled: often personified or treated as a positive agency: Chance governs all. |
| 2. | luck or fortune: a game of chance. |
| 3. | a possibility or probability of anything happening: a fifty-percent chance of success. |
| 4. | an opportune or favorable time; opportunity: Now is your chance. |
| 5. | Baseball. an opportunity to field the ball and make a put-out or assist. |
| 6. | a risk or hazard: Take a chance. |
| 7. | a share or ticket in a lottery or prize drawing: The charity is selling chances for a dollar each. |
| 8. | chances, probability: The chances are that the train hasn't left yet. |
| 9. | Midland and Southern U.S. a quantity or number (usually fol. by of). |
| 10. | Archaic. an unfortunate event; mishap. |
| 11. | to happen or occur by chance: It chanced that our arrivals coincided. |
| 12. | to take the chances or risks of; risk (often fol. by impersonal it): I'll have to chance it, whatever the outcome. |
| 13. | not planned or expected; accidental: a chance occurrence. |
| 14. | chance on or upon, to come upon by chance; meet unexpectedly: She chanced on a rare kind of mushroom during her walk through the woods. |
| 15. | by chance, without plan or intent; accidentally: I met her again by chance in a department store in Paris. |
| 16. | on the chance, in the mild hope or against the possibility: I'll wait on the chance that she'll come. |
| 17. | on the off chance, in the very slight hope or against the very slight possibility. |
chance (chāns) n.
v. chanced, chanc·ing, chanc·es v. intr. To come about by chance; occur: It chanced that the train was late that day. v. tr. To take the risk or hazard of: not willing to chance it. Phrasal Verb(s): chance on/uponTo find or meet accidentally; happen upon: While in Paris we chanced on two old friends. Idiom(s): by chance
Idiom(s): on the off chanceIn the slight hope or possibility. [Middle English, unexpected event, from Old French, from Vulgar Latin *cadentia, from Latin cadēns, cadent-, present participle of cadere, to fall, befall; see kad- in Indo-European roots.] Synonyms: These adjectives apply to what is determined not by deliberation but by accident. Chance stresses lack of premeditation: a chance meeting with a friend. |
Chance
(Luke 10:31). "It was not by chance that the priest came down by that road at that time, but by a specific arrangement and in exact fulfilment of a plan; not the plan of the priest, nor the plan of the wounded traveller, but the plan of God. By coincidence (Gr. sungkuria) the priest came down, that is, by the conjunction of two things, in fact, which were previously constituted a pair in the providence of God. In the result they fell together according to the omniscient Designer's plan. This is the true theory of the divine government." Compare the meeting of Philip with the Ethiopian (Acts 8:26, 27). There is no "chance" in God's empire. "Chance" is only another word for our want of knowledge as to the way in which one event falls in with another (1 Sam. 6:9; Eccl. 9:11).
chance
In addition to the idioms beginning with chance, also see by chance; Chinaman's chance; eye to the main chance; fat chance; fighting chance; jump at (the chance); not have an earthly chance; on the (off) chance; snowball's chance in hell; sporting chance; stand a chance; take a chance; take one's chances.