English edit

Verb edit

occurre (third-person singular simple present occurres, present participle occurring, simple past and past participle occurred)

  1. Obsolete form of occur.
    • 1524 February 3 (Gregorian calendar), Thomas Wolsey, “LXXIX. Wosley to [Richard] Sampson, &c.”, in State Papers Published under the Authority of Her Majesty’s Commission, volume VI (King Henry the Eighth. Part V.), London: [] George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode, [], published 1849, →OCLC, page 242:
      [I]t was therfore thought unto the Kings Highnes and his Counsail expedient, bifore the depeche of this post, to have a mature and groundly consultacion, by deliberate advice, for the more perfite instruccion to be geven unto you in al suche thinges as may occurre and chaunce touching the said commyn matiers; []
    • 1605, Egeon Askevv, Brotherly Reconcilement: Preached in Oxford for the Vnion of Some, and Now Published with Larger Meditations for the Vnitie of All in This Church and Common-wealth: [], London: [] George Bishop, page 320:
      To be ſhort, many ſtories of the kings of Babylon, the Medes, Perſians, and Macedonians, occurre in Scripture, which without prophane ſtories we cannot explane.
    • 1657, Renodæus, translated by Richard Tomlinson, A Medicinal Dispensatory, Containing the VVhole Body of Physick Discovering the Natures, Properties, and Vertues of Vegetables, Minerals, & Animals: The Manner of Compounding Medicaments, and the Way to Administer Them. Methodically Digested in Five Books of Philosophical and Pharmaceutical Institutions; Three Books of Physical Materials Galenical and Chymical. Together with a Most Perfect and Absolute Pharmacopoea or Apothecaries Shop. Accommodated with Three Useful Tables., London: [] Jo: Streater and Ja: Cottrel; [] , page 378:
      Theſe words, Pix, Teda, Piſſa, Palimpiſſa, Zopiſſa, Piſſaphaltos, and Pix navalis, often occurre in the narration and dilucidation of Roſines; but what they denote, every one knows not at firſt ſight: Pix then or Pitch, is the flux of combuſt Roſine; or rather, a fat and roſinous liquor, colliquated and educed out of the middle of a Pine-tree accended.

Latin edit

Verb edit

occurre

  1. second-person singular present active imperative of occurrō