an unavoidable danger or risk, even though often foreseeable: The job was full of hazards.
something causing unavoidable danger, peril, risk, or difficulty: the many hazards of the big city.
the absence or lack of predictability; chance; uncertainty: There is an element of hazard in the execution of the most painstaking plans.
Golf. a bunker, sand trap, or the like, constituting an obstacle.
the uncertainty of the result in throwing a die.
a game played with two dice, an earlier and more complicated form of craps.
Court Tennis. any of the winning openings.
(in English billiards) a stroke by which the player pockets the object ball (winning hazard ) or his or her own ball after contact with another ball (losing hazard ).
verb (used with object)
to offer (a statement, conjecture, etc.) with the possibility of facing criticism, disapproval, failure, or the like; venture: He hazarded a guess, with trepidation, as to her motives in writing the article.
to put to the risk of being lost; expose to risk: In making the investment, he hazarded all his savings.
to take or run the risk of (a misfortune, penalty, etc.): Thieves hazard arrest.
to venture upon (anything of doubtful issue): to hazard a dangerous encounter.
Idioms for hazard
at hazard, at risk; at stake; subject to chance: His reputation was at hazard in his new ventures.
Origin of hazard
1250–1300; Middle English hasard<Old French, perhaps <Arabic al-zahr the die
It might be a hazard of the job, and even if you leave Instagram, it would probably be good to talk to a therapist who can help you develop coping strategies.
Social Media Feels Increasingly Toxic. What Do I Do?|Blair Braverman|August 29, 2020|Outside Online
Autonomous vehicles need to be able to predict whether a child is about to run into the road or whether a wobbling cyclist presents a hazard.
How special relativity can help AI predict the future|Will Heaven|August 28, 2020|MIT Technology Review
Yet, while desire is one thing, the hazards that await are another.
Clean, Lean, Mean Machines: 5 Super COVID-Safe Gyms|Joshua Eferighe|August 28, 2020|Ozy
It is outrageous that these companies are keeping all of us in the dark about the dangers these workers face and the hazards that still exist across San Diego County and the state.
The Pandemic Hasn’t Gone Away – Neither Should Hazard Pay|Todd Walters and Brent E. Beltrán|August 20, 2020|Voice of San Diego
The job may look as simple as connecting two wires, but doing the job incorrectly can be a true safety hazard either immediately or down the road.
Know your limits when it comes to DIY|Sherri Anne Green|August 15, 2020|Washington Blade
The Hazard gang is a multi-generational gang based in the East Los Angeles area.
The Mexican Mafia Is the Daddy of All Street Gangs|Seth Ferranti|December 11, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Hazard ratios were largest for benzodiazepines—the most commonly prescribed drug class.
Anti-Anxiety and Sleeping Pills Increase Risk of Death, New Study Reports|Brandy Zadrozny|April 1, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The firefighters did not want the ambulatory passengers to chance onto an electrified rail or encounter some other hazard.
Amazing Grace in the Bronx: Inside the Metro-North Train-Wreck Rescue|Michael Daly|December 2, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Also omitting smoking status and body mass index increases the hazard ratio to 1.20 (95 percent CI, 1.15–1.24).
No, Really, It's Possible That Health Insurance May Not Make Us Healthier|Megan McArdle|May 7, 2013|DAILY BEAST
But Oceana residents have still found ways to inject the newer version, despite the hazard controls.
‘Oxyana’ Documentary at Tribeca Exposes the OxyContin Epidemic|Marlow Stern|April 23, 2013|DAILY BEAST
On these counts are we to hazard the diagnosis of facial trophoneurosis?
Tics and Their Treatment|Henry Meigne
Many will say before fools what they would not hazard before wise men; not considering that fools can repeat as well as parrots.
Leonora|Maria Edgeworth
He is wondrous loth to hazard his credulity, and whilst he fears to believe amiss, believes nothing.
Microcosmography|John Earle
Wandering hither and thither at hazard, he found himself in the great gallery devoted to Egyptian stone objects and sculpture.
Smith and the Pharaohs, and Other Tales|Henry Rider Haggard
She read the sort of man he was; she could also hazard a guess as to the man's present state.
Beauchamp's Career, Complete|George Meredith
British Dictionary definitions for hazard
hazard
/ (ˈhæzəd) /
noun
exposure or vulnerability to injury, loss, evil, etc
at hazardat risk; in danger
a thing likely to cause injury, etc
golfan obstacle such as a bunker, a road, rough, water, etc
chance; accident (esp in the phrase by hazard)
a gambling game played with two dice
real tennis
the receiver's side of the court
one of the winning openings
billiardsa scoring stroke made either when a ball other than the striker's is pocketed (winning hazard) or the striker's cue ball itself (losing hazard)
verb(tr)
to chance or risk
to venture (an opinion, guess, etc)
to expose to danger
Derived forms of hazard
hazardable, adjectivehazard-free, adjective
Word Origin for hazard
C13: from Old French hasard, from Arabic az-zahr the die