The Meaning of Occur and the Spelling of Its Forms
Occur has three meanings. It means "to be found or met with; appear," as in "a phenomenon that occurs around the world"; it means "to come into existence; happen," as in "an event that occurred on Friday"; and it means "to come to mind," as in "it occurs to me that the word is quite useful."
It's an unusual-looking word, being so small but with two c's up against each other, and then just a simple r at the end. The r is doubled, though, for the past tense: occurred. And the double r continues in the present participle: occurring.
The event is scheduled to occur at noon tomorrow.
No one was ready for what was about to occur.
There's a chance that a similar event will occur in the future.
The disease tends to occur in children under the age of five.
The plant occurs naturally throughout South America.
Recent Examples on the Web
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The weeklong fire occurred at a cold storage warehouse operated by Lineage — previously known as Lineage Logistics — and could take days to extinguish.—
Stephanie Breijo,
Los Angeles Times,
24 June 2026 Otherwise, cave-ins, leaks and catastrophic damage to wells can occur.—
David Goldman,
CNN Money,
24 June 2026 Campers were not instructed about how a flood evacuation would occur.—
Mateo Rosiles,
USA Today,
23 June 2026 Typically, Prime Day has occurred in the middle of July, however for 2026, Amazon has moved up the date of its biggest bespoke sale to June.—
Adam Campbell-Schmitt,
Bon Appetit Magazine,
23 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for occur
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Latin occurrere "to run to meet, confront in a hostile manner, be met, present itself (to the mind)," from oc-, assimilated variant of ob-ob- + currere "to run, roll, move swiftly" — more at current entry 1
from Latin occurrere "to be found or met with, appear," literally, "to run up against," from oc-, ob- "in the way" and currere "to run" — related to current, incur