A short word that is used when one finds something unexpectedly












6















To my significant consternation, I have forgotten a word which is used when an individual happens to find or discover something unexpectedly.



For example, one might say "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I _____ upon a most challenging question. Of course, I helped the gentleman as soon as I could since he asked so nicely."



I have a feeling it is a scarcely used word.



N.B the word I am looking for is not 'Chanced upon'










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  • Using thank-yous and taglines is against Stack Exchange policy per meta.stackexchange.com/q/2950/295232 so please do not use these or edit them back in.

    – tchrist
    Dec 9 '18 at 19:56
















6















To my significant consternation, I have forgotten a word which is used when an individual happens to find or discover something unexpectedly.



For example, one might say "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I _____ upon a most challenging question. Of course, I helped the gentleman as soon as I could since he asked so nicely."



I have a feeling it is a scarcely used word.



N.B the word I am looking for is not 'Chanced upon'










share|improve this question

























  • Using thank-yous and taglines is against Stack Exchange policy per meta.stackexchange.com/q/2950/295232 so please do not use these or edit them back in.

    – tchrist
    Dec 9 '18 at 19:56














6












6








6








To my significant consternation, I have forgotten a word which is used when an individual happens to find or discover something unexpectedly.



For example, one might say "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I _____ upon a most challenging question. Of course, I helped the gentleman as soon as I could since he asked so nicely."



I have a feeling it is a scarcely used word.



N.B the word I am looking for is not 'Chanced upon'










share|improve this question
















To my significant consternation, I have forgotten a word which is used when an individual happens to find or discover something unexpectedly.



For example, one might say "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I _____ upon a most challenging question. Of course, I helped the gentleman as soon as I could since he asked so nicely."



I have a feeling it is a scarcely used word.



N.B the word I am looking for is not 'Chanced upon'







single-word-requests






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share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








edited Dec 9 '18 at 19:54









tchrist

108k28290464




108k28290464










asked Dec 6 '18 at 15:13









WilliamWilliam

3616




3616













  • Using thank-yous and taglines is against Stack Exchange policy per meta.stackexchange.com/q/2950/295232 so please do not use these or edit them back in.

    – tchrist
    Dec 9 '18 at 19:56



















  • Using thank-yous and taglines is against Stack Exchange policy per meta.stackexchange.com/q/2950/295232 so please do not use these or edit them back in.

    – tchrist
    Dec 9 '18 at 19:56

















Using thank-yous and taglines is against Stack Exchange policy per meta.stackexchange.com/q/2950/295232 so please do not use these or edit them back in.

– tchrist
Dec 9 '18 at 19:56





Using thank-yous and taglines is against Stack Exchange policy per meta.stackexchange.com/q/2950/295232 so please do not use these or edit them back in.

– tchrist
Dec 9 '18 at 19:56










7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes


















16














I suspect you may be looking for 'lit' or 'lighted'



Per the OED




to light on or upon (or of): to happen to come upon, chance upon; to meet with or discover, esp. unexpectedly or by accident; to come across, whether as the result of search or not.




They give the following examples:




1738 J. Wesley Wks. (1830) I. 38 I called at Alringham, and there lit upon a Quaker.



1867 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (1876) I. 547 I have as yet only once lighted on the use of the word in the singular.




Some more recent citations from around the web:




Going over this old ground, she poked through the pile of papers she had brought with her to chaperone her during her dinner. There was the card for the children there were the lecture notes, there was the note she had written to Karel. She tore it up, and pushed the pieces into the folder. The folder was full of such scraps. Then, wavering, she lit upon another new postcard -




The Realms of Gold: A Novel
Margaret Drabble 2013.




And when I lit upon the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant, I knew I
had found what I was searching for.




Mark D White Kantian Ethics and Economics Autonomy, Dignity and Character
copyright 2018 Stanford University Press






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    excellent, this is exactly the word I am looking for

    – William
    Dec 6 '18 at 16:32











  • @William That's a bit strange then, since stumble upon is far more common. But this works too.

    – only_pro
    Dec 6 '18 at 22:36






  • 3





    @only_pro Why is it strange that the ‘far more common’ stumble upon didn’t turn out to be the ‘short’ and ‘scarcely used’ word the OP was looking for?

    – Spagirl
    Dec 6 '18 at 23:49











  • Do you have any more recent examples of this? I'd argue that this is not at all common usage (native BrE speaker).

    – Steve Melnikoff
    Dec 7 '18 at 10:05






  • 1





    @SteveMelnikoff You are perfectly welcome to argue that, but be aware that since NO-ONE is claiming otherwise, it will be a bit of a short argument. The OP asked for a word which they acknowledged was 'scarcely used'. I am also a native BrE speaker if that is relevant. I really don't understand what your point is, the word I supplied is the word the OP was looking for....

    – Spagirl
    Dec 7 '18 at 11:03



















38














Did you mean stumble?




4 a : to come unexpectedly or by chance




(source: Merriam-Webster)




I was looking through that old chest of draws upstairs when I stumbled upon a rather suspicious looking package.




looks pretty natural to me.






share|improve this answer
























  • Is there a nGram-ish way of finding out what the most used word before upon (other than once) is? IMO it's a cliche of a sentence utterly demanding this word.

    – Mazura
    Dec 7 '18 at 1:07






  • 1





    @Mazura look upon is about 17 times more common than stumble upon, while the latter is only modestly more common than happen upon. The other "upon" answers are even less common.

    – Chappo
    Dec 7 '18 at 4:32








  • 1





    The phrase stumble upon is so extremely common for this meaning that it was chosen as the name for a website designed to provide opportunities to discover new content: Stumbleupon.com (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StumbleUpon

    – barbecue
    Dec 7 '18 at 22:06





















14














You could use happen upon:




: to find or meet (someone or something) by chance



// She happened on a little cottage in the woods.



// I happened upon them at the grocery store.







share|improve this answer

































    12














    Not the single word you're looking for, but this phrasal verb fits perfectly.



    "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I came across a most challenging question."




    come across - "if you come across something or someone, you find them or meet them by chance."




    Example sentences:



    I came across a $100 bill on my way to work yesterday!



    I came across Peter at the bookshop after work.



    If you come across my wallet, please let me know. I forget where I left it.






    share|improve this answer

































      2














      According to Merriam-Webster Dictionary:




      bump into

      to encounter especially by chance.




      Though it is quite informal, but short and metaphorical.






      share|improve this answer





















      • 1





        I would never use this in the context provided by the OP. The OP is talking about visually navigating a website (SE), whereas I would use bump into only in a physical situation. For example, bumping into a friend at the mall or two cars bumping into each other.

        – whatisit
        Dec 6 '18 at 22:56



















      1














      I would chance (no pun intended):




      struck upon







      share|improve this answer





















      • 4





        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published example or definition for your proposed phrase, linked to the source. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

        – Chappo
        Dec 6 '18 at 20:07



















      -2














      "Serendipitous" appears to fit the bill precisely






      share|improve this answer



















      • 4





        Unfortunately, it does not. Using that word makes the sentence ungrammatical: "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I serendipitous upon a most challenging question." In fact, the OP is requesting a verb (as some other answers/responses have stated) and serendipitous is an adjective... Serendipitous also has a strong meaning of luck or luckiness, whereas the OP is simply asking for discovering something unexpectedly.

        – whatisit
        Dec 6 '18 at 22:46






      • 3





        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published definition for your word, linked to the source. [I note that doing so might have alerted you to the mismatch between your word and what the OP was asking for]. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

        – Chappo
        Dec 6 '18 at 23:53











      • Perhaps we should coin the word serendipped. "I serendipped into a pile of rhubarb."

        – barbecue
        Dec 7 '18 at 22:11










      protected by tchrist Dec 7 '18 at 3:44



      Thank you for your interest in this question.
      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














      7 Answers
      7






      active

      oldest

      votes








      7 Answers
      7






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      16














      I suspect you may be looking for 'lit' or 'lighted'



      Per the OED




      to light on or upon (or of): to happen to come upon, chance upon; to meet with or discover, esp. unexpectedly or by accident; to come across, whether as the result of search or not.




      They give the following examples:




      1738 J. Wesley Wks. (1830) I. 38 I called at Alringham, and there lit upon a Quaker.



      1867 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (1876) I. 547 I have as yet only once lighted on the use of the word in the singular.




      Some more recent citations from around the web:




      Going over this old ground, she poked through the pile of papers she had brought with her to chaperone her during her dinner. There was the card for the children there were the lecture notes, there was the note she had written to Karel. She tore it up, and pushed the pieces into the folder. The folder was full of such scraps. Then, wavering, she lit upon another new postcard -




      The Realms of Gold: A Novel
      Margaret Drabble 2013.




      And when I lit upon the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant, I knew I
      had found what I was searching for.




      Mark D White Kantian Ethics and Economics Autonomy, Dignity and Character
      copyright 2018 Stanford University Press






      share|improve this answer





















      • 1





        excellent, this is exactly the word I am looking for

        – William
        Dec 6 '18 at 16:32











      • @William That's a bit strange then, since stumble upon is far more common. But this works too.

        – only_pro
        Dec 6 '18 at 22:36






      • 3





        @only_pro Why is it strange that the ‘far more common’ stumble upon didn’t turn out to be the ‘short’ and ‘scarcely used’ word the OP was looking for?

        – Spagirl
        Dec 6 '18 at 23:49











      • Do you have any more recent examples of this? I'd argue that this is not at all common usage (native BrE speaker).

        – Steve Melnikoff
        Dec 7 '18 at 10:05






      • 1





        @SteveMelnikoff You are perfectly welcome to argue that, but be aware that since NO-ONE is claiming otherwise, it will be a bit of a short argument. The OP asked for a word which they acknowledged was 'scarcely used'. I am also a native BrE speaker if that is relevant. I really don't understand what your point is, the word I supplied is the word the OP was looking for....

        – Spagirl
        Dec 7 '18 at 11:03
















      16














      I suspect you may be looking for 'lit' or 'lighted'



      Per the OED




      to light on or upon (or of): to happen to come upon, chance upon; to meet with or discover, esp. unexpectedly or by accident; to come across, whether as the result of search or not.




      They give the following examples:




      1738 J. Wesley Wks. (1830) I. 38 I called at Alringham, and there lit upon a Quaker.



      1867 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (1876) I. 547 I have as yet only once lighted on the use of the word in the singular.




      Some more recent citations from around the web:




      Going over this old ground, she poked through the pile of papers she had brought with her to chaperone her during her dinner. There was the card for the children there were the lecture notes, there was the note she had written to Karel. She tore it up, and pushed the pieces into the folder. The folder was full of such scraps. Then, wavering, she lit upon another new postcard -




      The Realms of Gold: A Novel
      Margaret Drabble 2013.




      And when I lit upon the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant, I knew I
      had found what I was searching for.




      Mark D White Kantian Ethics and Economics Autonomy, Dignity and Character
      copyright 2018 Stanford University Press






      share|improve this answer





















      • 1





        excellent, this is exactly the word I am looking for

        – William
        Dec 6 '18 at 16:32











      • @William That's a bit strange then, since stumble upon is far more common. But this works too.

        – only_pro
        Dec 6 '18 at 22:36






      • 3





        @only_pro Why is it strange that the ‘far more common’ stumble upon didn’t turn out to be the ‘short’ and ‘scarcely used’ word the OP was looking for?

        – Spagirl
        Dec 6 '18 at 23:49











      • Do you have any more recent examples of this? I'd argue that this is not at all common usage (native BrE speaker).

        – Steve Melnikoff
        Dec 7 '18 at 10:05






      • 1





        @SteveMelnikoff You are perfectly welcome to argue that, but be aware that since NO-ONE is claiming otherwise, it will be a bit of a short argument. The OP asked for a word which they acknowledged was 'scarcely used'. I am also a native BrE speaker if that is relevant. I really don't understand what your point is, the word I supplied is the word the OP was looking for....

        – Spagirl
        Dec 7 '18 at 11:03














      16












      16








      16







      I suspect you may be looking for 'lit' or 'lighted'



      Per the OED




      to light on or upon (or of): to happen to come upon, chance upon; to meet with or discover, esp. unexpectedly or by accident; to come across, whether as the result of search or not.




      They give the following examples:




      1738 J. Wesley Wks. (1830) I. 38 I called at Alringham, and there lit upon a Quaker.



      1867 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (1876) I. 547 I have as yet only once lighted on the use of the word in the singular.




      Some more recent citations from around the web:




      Going over this old ground, she poked through the pile of papers she had brought with her to chaperone her during her dinner. There was the card for the children there were the lecture notes, there was the note she had written to Karel. She tore it up, and pushed the pieces into the folder. The folder was full of such scraps. Then, wavering, she lit upon another new postcard -




      The Realms of Gold: A Novel
      Margaret Drabble 2013.




      And when I lit upon the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant, I knew I
      had found what I was searching for.




      Mark D White Kantian Ethics and Economics Autonomy, Dignity and Character
      copyright 2018 Stanford University Press






      share|improve this answer















      I suspect you may be looking for 'lit' or 'lighted'



      Per the OED




      to light on or upon (or of): to happen to come upon, chance upon; to meet with or discover, esp. unexpectedly or by accident; to come across, whether as the result of search or not.




      They give the following examples:




      1738 J. Wesley Wks. (1830) I. 38 I called at Alringham, and there lit upon a Quaker.



      1867 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (1876) I. 547 I have as yet only once lighted on the use of the word in the singular.




      Some more recent citations from around the web:




      Going over this old ground, she poked through the pile of papers she had brought with her to chaperone her during her dinner. There was the card for the children there were the lecture notes, there was the note she had written to Karel. She tore it up, and pushed the pieces into the folder. The folder was full of such scraps. Then, wavering, she lit upon another new postcard -




      The Realms of Gold: A Novel
      Margaret Drabble 2013.




      And when I lit upon the moral philosophy of Immanuel Kant, I knew I
      had found what I was searching for.




      Mark D White Kantian Ethics and Economics Autonomy, Dignity and Character
      copyright 2018 Stanford University Press







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Dec 7 '18 at 17:40

























      answered Dec 6 '18 at 16:06









      SpagirlSpagirl

      10.1k2045




      10.1k2045








      • 1





        excellent, this is exactly the word I am looking for

        – William
        Dec 6 '18 at 16:32











      • @William That's a bit strange then, since stumble upon is far more common. But this works too.

        – only_pro
        Dec 6 '18 at 22:36






      • 3





        @only_pro Why is it strange that the ‘far more common’ stumble upon didn’t turn out to be the ‘short’ and ‘scarcely used’ word the OP was looking for?

        – Spagirl
        Dec 6 '18 at 23:49











      • Do you have any more recent examples of this? I'd argue that this is not at all common usage (native BrE speaker).

        – Steve Melnikoff
        Dec 7 '18 at 10:05






      • 1





        @SteveMelnikoff You are perfectly welcome to argue that, but be aware that since NO-ONE is claiming otherwise, it will be a bit of a short argument. The OP asked for a word which they acknowledged was 'scarcely used'. I am also a native BrE speaker if that is relevant. I really don't understand what your point is, the word I supplied is the word the OP was looking for....

        – Spagirl
        Dec 7 '18 at 11:03














      • 1





        excellent, this is exactly the word I am looking for

        – William
        Dec 6 '18 at 16:32











      • @William That's a bit strange then, since stumble upon is far more common. But this works too.

        – only_pro
        Dec 6 '18 at 22:36






      • 3





        @only_pro Why is it strange that the ‘far more common’ stumble upon didn’t turn out to be the ‘short’ and ‘scarcely used’ word the OP was looking for?

        – Spagirl
        Dec 6 '18 at 23:49











      • Do you have any more recent examples of this? I'd argue that this is not at all common usage (native BrE speaker).

        – Steve Melnikoff
        Dec 7 '18 at 10:05






      • 1





        @SteveMelnikoff You are perfectly welcome to argue that, but be aware that since NO-ONE is claiming otherwise, it will be a bit of a short argument. The OP asked for a word which they acknowledged was 'scarcely used'. I am also a native BrE speaker if that is relevant. I really don't understand what your point is, the word I supplied is the word the OP was looking for....

        – Spagirl
        Dec 7 '18 at 11:03








      1




      1





      excellent, this is exactly the word I am looking for

      – William
      Dec 6 '18 at 16:32





      excellent, this is exactly the word I am looking for

      – William
      Dec 6 '18 at 16:32













      @William That's a bit strange then, since stumble upon is far more common. But this works too.

      – only_pro
      Dec 6 '18 at 22:36





      @William That's a bit strange then, since stumble upon is far more common. But this works too.

      – only_pro
      Dec 6 '18 at 22:36




      3




      3





      @only_pro Why is it strange that the ‘far more common’ stumble upon didn’t turn out to be the ‘short’ and ‘scarcely used’ word the OP was looking for?

      – Spagirl
      Dec 6 '18 at 23:49





      @only_pro Why is it strange that the ‘far more common’ stumble upon didn’t turn out to be the ‘short’ and ‘scarcely used’ word the OP was looking for?

      – Spagirl
      Dec 6 '18 at 23:49













      Do you have any more recent examples of this? I'd argue that this is not at all common usage (native BrE speaker).

      – Steve Melnikoff
      Dec 7 '18 at 10:05





      Do you have any more recent examples of this? I'd argue that this is not at all common usage (native BrE speaker).

      – Steve Melnikoff
      Dec 7 '18 at 10:05




      1




      1





      @SteveMelnikoff You are perfectly welcome to argue that, but be aware that since NO-ONE is claiming otherwise, it will be a bit of a short argument. The OP asked for a word which they acknowledged was 'scarcely used'. I am also a native BrE speaker if that is relevant. I really don't understand what your point is, the word I supplied is the word the OP was looking for....

      – Spagirl
      Dec 7 '18 at 11:03





      @SteveMelnikoff You are perfectly welcome to argue that, but be aware that since NO-ONE is claiming otherwise, it will be a bit of a short argument. The OP asked for a word which they acknowledged was 'scarcely used'. I am also a native BrE speaker if that is relevant. I really don't understand what your point is, the word I supplied is the word the OP was looking for....

      – Spagirl
      Dec 7 '18 at 11:03













      38














      Did you mean stumble?




      4 a : to come unexpectedly or by chance




      (source: Merriam-Webster)




      I was looking through that old chest of draws upstairs when I stumbled upon a rather suspicious looking package.




      looks pretty natural to me.






      share|improve this answer
























      • Is there a nGram-ish way of finding out what the most used word before upon (other than once) is? IMO it's a cliche of a sentence utterly demanding this word.

        – Mazura
        Dec 7 '18 at 1:07






      • 1





        @Mazura look upon is about 17 times more common than stumble upon, while the latter is only modestly more common than happen upon. The other "upon" answers are even less common.

        – Chappo
        Dec 7 '18 at 4:32








      • 1





        The phrase stumble upon is so extremely common for this meaning that it was chosen as the name for a website designed to provide opportunities to discover new content: Stumbleupon.com (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StumbleUpon

        – barbecue
        Dec 7 '18 at 22:06


















      38














      Did you mean stumble?




      4 a : to come unexpectedly or by chance




      (source: Merriam-Webster)




      I was looking through that old chest of draws upstairs when I stumbled upon a rather suspicious looking package.




      looks pretty natural to me.






      share|improve this answer
























      • Is there a nGram-ish way of finding out what the most used word before upon (other than once) is? IMO it's a cliche of a sentence utterly demanding this word.

        – Mazura
        Dec 7 '18 at 1:07






      • 1





        @Mazura look upon is about 17 times more common than stumble upon, while the latter is only modestly more common than happen upon. The other "upon" answers are even less common.

        – Chappo
        Dec 7 '18 at 4:32








      • 1





        The phrase stumble upon is so extremely common for this meaning that it was chosen as the name for a website designed to provide opportunities to discover new content: Stumbleupon.com (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StumbleUpon

        – barbecue
        Dec 7 '18 at 22:06
















      38












      38








      38







      Did you mean stumble?




      4 a : to come unexpectedly or by chance




      (source: Merriam-Webster)




      I was looking through that old chest of draws upstairs when I stumbled upon a rather suspicious looking package.




      looks pretty natural to me.






      share|improve this answer













      Did you mean stumble?




      4 a : to come unexpectedly or by chance




      (source: Merriam-Webster)




      I was looking through that old chest of draws upstairs when I stumbled upon a rather suspicious looking package.




      looks pretty natural to me.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Dec 6 '18 at 15:16









      GlorfindelGlorfindel

      6,22283339




      6,22283339













      • Is there a nGram-ish way of finding out what the most used word before upon (other than once) is? IMO it's a cliche of a sentence utterly demanding this word.

        – Mazura
        Dec 7 '18 at 1:07






      • 1





        @Mazura look upon is about 17 times more common than stumble upon, while the latter is only modestly more common than happen upon. The other "upon" answers are even less common.

        – Chappo
        Dec 7 '18 at 4:32








      • 1





        The phrase stumble upon is so extremely common for this meaning that it was chosen as the name for a website designed to provide opportunities to discover new content: Stumbleupon.com (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StumbleUpon

        – barbecue
        Dec 7 '18 at 22:06





















      • Is there a nGram-ish way of finding out what the most used word before upon (other than once) is? IMO it's a cliche of a sentence utterly demanding this word.

        – Mazura
        Dec 7 '18 at 1:07






      • 1





        @Mazura look upon is about 17 times more common than stumble upon, while the latter is only modestly more common than happen upon. The other "upon" answers are even less common.

        – Chappo
        Dec 7 '18 at 4:32








      • 1





        The phrase stumble upon is so extremely common for this meaning that it was chosen as the name for a website designed to provide opportunities to discover new content: Stumbleupon.com (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StumbleUpon

        – barbecue
        Dec 7 '18 at 22:06



















      Is there a nGram-ish way of finding out what the most used word before upon (other than once) is? IMO it's a cliche of a sentence utterly demanding this word.

      – Mazura
      Dec 7 '18 at 1:07





      Is there a nGram-ish way of finding out what the most used word before upon (other than once) is? IMO it's a cliche of a sentence utterly demanding this word.

      – Mazura
      Dec 7 '18 at 1:07




      1




      1





      @Mazura look upon is about 17 times more common than stumble upon, while the latter is only modestly more common than happen upon. The other "upon" answers are even less common.

      – Chappo
      Dec 7 '18 at 4:32







      @Mazura look upon is about 17 times more common than stumble upon, while the latter is only modestly more common than happen upon. The other "upon" answers are even less common.

      – Chappo
      Dec 7 '18 at 4:32






      1




      1





      The phrase stumble upon is so extremely common for this meaning that it was chosen as the name for a website designed to provide opportunities to discover new content: Stumbleupon.com (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StumbleUpon

      – barbecue
      Dec 7 '18 at 22:06







      The phrase stumble upon is so extremely common for this meaning that it was chosen as the name for a website designed to provide opportunities to discover new content: Stumbleupon.com (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StumbleUpon

      – barbecue
      Dec 7 '18 at 22:06













      14














      You could use happen upon:




      : to find or meet (someone or something) by chance



      // She happened on a little cottage in the woods.



      // I happened upon them at the grocery store.







      share|improve this answer






























        14














        You could use happen upon:




        : to find or meet (someone or something) by chance



        // She happened on a little cottage in the woods.



        // I happened upon them at the grocery store.







        share|improve this answer




























          14












          14








          14







          You could use happen upon:




          : to find or meet (someone or something) by chance



          // She happened on a little cottage in the woods.



          // I happened upon them at the grocery store.







          share|improve this answer















          You could use happen upon:




          : to find or meet (someone or something) by chance



          // She happened on a little cottage in the woods.



          // I happened upon them at the grocery store.








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 7 '18 at 0:07









          Matt

          952412




          952412










          answered Dec 6 '18 at 18:44









          user112358user112358

          1473




          1473























              12














              Not the single word you're looking for, but this phrasal verb fits perfectly.



              "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I came across a most challenging question."




              come across - "if you come across something or someone, you find them or meet them by chance."




              Example sentences:



              I came across a $100 bill on my way to work yesterday!



              I came across Peter at the bookshop after work.



              If you come across my wallet, please let me know. I forget where I left it.






              share|improve this answer






























                12














                Not the single word you're looking for, but this phrasal verb fits perfectly.



                "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I came across a most challenging question."




                come across - "if you come across something or someone, you find them or meet them by chance."




                Example sentences:



                I came across a $100 bill on my way to work yesterday!



                I came across Peter at the bookshop after work.



                If you come across my wallet, please let me know. I forget where I left it.






                share|improve this answer




























                  12












                  12








                  12







                  Not the single word you're looking for, but this phrasal verb fits perfectly.



                  "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I came across a most challenging question."




                  come across - "if you come across something or someone, you find them or meet them by chance."




                  Example sentences:



                  I came across a $100 bill on my way to work yesterday!



                  I came across Peter at the bookshop after work.



                  If you come across my wallet, please let me know. I forget where I left it.






                  share|improve this answer















                  Not the single word you're looking for, but this phrasal verb fits perfectly.



                  "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I came across a most challenging question."




                  come across - "if you come across something or someone, you find them or meet them by chance."




                  Example sentences:



                  I came across a $100 bill on my way to work yesterday!



                  I came across Peter at the bookshop after work.



                  If you come across my wallet, please let me know. I forget where I left it.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Dec 6 '18 at 15:56

























                  answered Dec 6 '18 at 15:46









                  CentaurusCentaurus

                  38.4k28123245




                  38.4k28123245























                      2














                      According to Merriam-Webster Dictionary:




                      bump into

                      to encounter especially by chance.




                      Though it is quite informal, but short and metaphorical.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 1





                        I would never use this in the context provided by the OP. The OP is talking about visually navigating a website (SE), whereas I would use bump into only in a physical situation. For example, bumping into a friend at the mall or two cars bumping into each other.

                        – whatisit
                        Dec 6 '18 at 22:56
















                      2














                      According to Merriam-Webster Dictionary:




                      bump into

                      to encounter especially by chance.




                      Though it is quite informal, but short and metaphorical.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 1





                        I would never use this in the context provided by the OP. The OP is talking about visually navigating a website (SE), whereas I would use bump into only in a physical situation. For example, bumping into a friend at the mall or two cars bumping into each other.

                        – whatisit
                        Dec 6 '18 at 22:56














                      2












                      2








                      2







                      According to Merriam-Webster Dictionary:




                      bump into

                      to encounter especially by chance.




                      Though it is quite informal, but short and metaphorical.






                      share|improve this answer















                      According to Merriam-Webster Dictionary:




                      bump into

                      to encounter especially by chance.




                      Though it is quite informal, but short and metaphorical.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Dec 6 '18 at 21:28









                      Laurel

                      31.7k660112




                      31.7k660112










                      answered Dec 6 '18 at 16:11









                      user307254user307254

                      2,589514




                      2,589514








                      • 1





                        I would never use this in the context provided by the OP. The OP is talking about visually navigating a website (SE), whereas I would use bump into only in a physical situation. For example, bumping into a friend at the mall or two cars bumping into each other.

                        – whatisit
                        Dec 6 '18 at 22:56














                      • 1





                        I would never use this in the context provided by the OP. The OP is talking about visually navigating a website (SE), whereas I would use bump into only in a physical situation. For example, bumping into a friend at the mall or two cars bumping into each other.

                        – whatisit
                        Dec 6 '18 at 22:56








                      1




                      1





                      I would never use this in the context provided by the OP. The OP is talking about visually navigating a website (SE), whereas I would use bump into only in a physical situation. For example, bumping into a friend at the mall or two cars bumping into each other.

                      – whatisit
                      Dec 6 '18 at 22:56





                      I would never use this in the context provided by the OP. The OP is talking about visually navigating a website (SE), whereas I would use bump into only in a physical situation. For example, bumping into a friend at the mall or two cars bumping into each other.

                      – whatisit
                      Dec 6 '18 at 22:56











                      1














                      I would chance (no pun intended):




                      struck upon







                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 4





                        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published example or definition for your proposed phrase, linked to the source. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                        – Chappo
                        Dec 6 '18 at 20:07
















                      1














                      I would chance (no pun intended):




                      struck upon







                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 4





                        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published example or definition for your proposed phrase, linked to the source. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                        – Chappo
                        Dec 6 '18 at 20:07














                      1












                      1








                      1







                      I would chance (no pun intended):




                      struck upon







                      share|improve this answer















                      I would chance (no pun intended):




                      struck upon








                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Dec 6 '18 at 20:10









                      Chappo

                      2,69451225




                      2,69451225










                      answered Dec 6 '18 at 19:03









                      NuubieNuubie

                      171




                      171








                      • 4





                        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published example or definition for your proposed phrase, linked to the source. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                        – Chappo
                        Dec 6 '18 at 20:07














                      • 4





                        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published example or definition for your proposed phrase, linked to the source. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                        – Chappo
                        Dec 6 '18 at 20:07








                      4




                      4





                      Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published example or definition for your proposed phrase, linked to the source. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                      – Chappo
                      Dec 6 '18 at 20:07





                      Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published example or definition for your proposed phrase, linked to the source. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                      – Chappo
                      Dec 6 '18 at 20:07











                      -2














                      "Serendipitous" appears to fit the bill precisely






                      share|improve this answer



















                      • 4





                        Unfortunately, it does not. Using that word makes the sentence ungrammatical: "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I serendipitous upon a most challenging question." In fact, the OP is requesting a verb (as some other answers/responses have stated) and serendipitous is an adjective... Serendipitous also has a strong meaning of luck or luckiness, whereas the OP is simply asking for discovering something unexpectedly.

                        – whatisit
                        Dec 6 '18 at 22:46






                      • 3





                        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published definition for your word, linked to the source. [I note that doing so might have alerted you to the mismatch between your word and what the OP was asking for]. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                        – Chappo
                        Dec 6 '18 at 23:53











                      • Perhaps we should coin the word serendipped. "I serendipped into a pile of rhubarb."

                        – barbecue
                        Dec 7 '18 at 22:11
















                      -2














                      "Serendipitous" appears to fit the bill precisely






                      share|improve this answer



















                      • 4





                        Unfortunately, it does not. Using that word makes the sentence ungrammatical: "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I serendipitous upon a most challenging question." In fact, the OP is requesting a verb (as some other answers/responses have stated) and serendipitous is an adjective... Serendipitous also has a strong meaning of luck or luckiness, whereas the OP is simply asking for discovering something unexpectedly.

                        – whatisit
                        Dec 6 '18 at 22:46






                      • 3





                        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published definition for your word, linked to the source. [I note that doing so might have alerted you to the mismatch between your word and what the OP was asking for]. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                        – Chappo
                        Dec 6 '18 at 23:53











                      • Perhaps we should coin the word serendipped. "I serendipped into a pile of rhubarb."

                        – barbecue
                        Dec 7 '18 at 22:11














                      -2












                      -2








                      -2







                      "Serendipitous" appears to fit the bill precisely






                      share|improve this answer













                      "Serendipitous" appears to fit the bill precisely







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Dec 6 '18 at 22:22









                      whisperycatwhisperycat

                      151




                      151








                      • 4





                        Unfortunately, it does not. Using that word makes the sentence ungrammatical: "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I serendipitous upon a most challenging question." In fact, the OP is requesting a verb (as some other answers/responses have stated) and serendipitous is an adjective... Serendipitous also has a strong meaning of luck or luckiness, whereas the OP is simply asking for discovering something unexpectedly.

                        – whatisit
                        Dec 6 '18 at 22:46






                      • 3





                        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published definition for your word, linked to the source. [I note that doing so might have alerted you to the mismatch between your word and what the OP was asking for]. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                        – Chappo
                        Dec 6 '18 at 23:53











                      • Perhaps we should coin the word serendipped. "I serendipped into a pile of rhubarb."

                        – barbecue
                        Dec 7 '18 at 22:11














                      • 4





                        Unfortunately, it does not. Using that word makes the sentence ungrammatical: "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I serendipitous upon a most challenging question." In fact, the OP is requesting a verb (as some other answers/responses have stated) and serendipitous is an adjective... Serendipitous also has a strong meaning of luck or luckiness, whereas the OP is simply asking for discovering something unexpectedly.

                        – whatisit
                        Dec 6 '18 at 22:46






                      • 3





                        Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published definition for your word, linked to the source. [I note that doing so might have alerted you to the mismatch between your word and what the OP was asking for]. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                        – Chappo
                        Dec 6 '18 at 23:53











                      • Perhaps we should coin the word serendipped. "I serendipped into a pile of rhubarb."

                        – barbecue
                        Dec 7 '18 at 22:11








                      4




                      4





                      Unfortunately, it does not. Using that word makes the sentence ungrammatical: "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I serendipitous upon a most challenging question." In fact, the OP is requesting a verb (as some other answers/responses have stated) and serendipitous is an adjective... Serendipitous also has a strong meaning of luck or luckiness, whereas the OP is simply asking for discovering something unexpectedly.

                      – whatisit
                      Dec 6 '18 at 22:46





                      Unfortunately, it does not. Using that word makes the sentence ungrammatical: "I was browsing through Stack Exchange the other day when I serendipitous upon a most challenging question." In fact, the OP is requesting a verb (as some other answers/responses have stated) and serendipitous is an adjective... Serendipitous also has a strong meaning of luck or luckiness, whereas the OP is simply asking for discovering something unexpectedly.

                      – whatisit
                      Dec 6 '18 at 22:46




                      3




                      3





                      Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published definition for your word, linked to the source. [I note that doing so might have alerted you to the mismatch between your word and what the OP was asking for]. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                      – Chappo
                      Dec 6 '18 at 23:53





                      Please note, the system has flagged your answer for deletion as "low-quality because of its length and content." An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct. You can edit your answer to avoid deletion - for example, adding a published definition for your word, linked to the source. [I note that doing so might have alerted you to the mismatch between your word and what the OP was asking for]. For further guidance, see How to Answer and take the Tour :-)

                      – Chappo
                      Dec 6 '18 at 23:53













                      Perhaps we should coin the word serendipped. "I serendipped into a pile of rhubarb."

                      – barbecue
                      Dec 7 '18 at 22:11





                      Perhaps we should coin the word serendipped. "I serendipped into a pile of rhubarb."

                      – barbecue
                      Dec 7 '18 at 22:11





                      protected by tchrist Dec 7 '18 at 3:44



                      Thank you for your interest in this question.
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