chanced 
					英 [tʃɑːnst ]  
					美 [tʃænst ]  
					v.  冒险; 拿…去冒风险; 偶然发生; 碰巧
					
					
					
					
						
							柯林斯词典 
							
								
									
										N-VAR 可能(性);机会chance of  something happening, it is possible that it will happen.
											Do you think they have a chance of beating Australia?... This partnership has a good chance of success... The specialist who carried out the brain scan thought Tim's chances of survival were still slim... There was really very little chance that Ben would ever have led a normal life.  
										N-COUNT 机会;机遇chance to  do something, you have the opportunity to do it.
											The electoral council announced that all eligible people would get a chance to vote... Most refugee doctors never get the chance to practice medicine in British hospitals... I felt I had to give him a chance.  
										ADJ 偶然的;意外的;凑巧的chance  meeting or event is one that is not planned or expected.
											...a chance meeting. Chance  is also a noun....a victim of chance and circumstance.  
										VERB 碰巧(做);偶然发现chance to  do something or chance on  something, you do it or find it although you had not planned or tried to.
											A man I chanced to meet proved to be a most unusual character... It was just then that I chanced to look round. ...Christopher Columbus, who chanced upon the Dominican Republic nearly 500 years ago.  
										VERB 冒…的险chance  something, you do it even though there is a risk that you may not succeed or that something bad may happen.
											Andy knew the risks. I cannot believe he would have chanced it... He decided no assassin would chance a shot from amongst that crowd.  
										See also:  off-chance   
										PHRASE 偶然;碰巧by chance  was not planned by anyone.
											He had met Mr Maude by chance.  
										PHRASE (用以询问某事是否属实)会不会,可能by any chance  when you are asking questions in order to find out whether something that you think might be true is actually true.
											Are they by any chance related?  
										PHRASE 有可能;有机会stands a chance of  achieving something, you mean that they are likely to achieve it. If you say that someone doesn't stand a chance of  achieving something, you mean that they cannot possibly achieve it.
											Being very good at science subjects, I stood a good chance of gaining high grades... Neither is seen as standing any chance of snatching the leadership from him.  
										PHRASE 冒险;碰运气take a chance , you try to do something although there is a large risk of danger or failure.
											You take a chance on the weather if you holiday in the UK... From then on, they were taking no chances... Dennis was not a man to take chances.  
									 
								 
								
							 
							
 
							双语例句 
							
								
									
										A man I chanced to meet proved to be a most unusual character  
										It was just then that I chanced to look round.  
										Andy knew the risks. I cannot believe he would have chanced it  
										We chanced to be out when she called.  
										It ( so) chanced that I was in the countryside at the time.  
										I chanced to see your father in the street.  
										They happened [ chanced] to have their instruments with them.  
										There chanced to be someone there I knew.  
										Xiao Wang happened ( or chanced) to be passing by.  
										He chanced to save the man.  
										They chanced on a dying wolf.  
										I chanced to hear the mumbled conversation in the subway.  
										She chanced to be in the park when I was there.  
										I shook his hand and chanced a hug.  
										They chanced to be in the restaurant when I arrived.  
										Guess who I chanced on while I was in the city today?  
										I chanced to be out when he called me.  
										I chanced to see my friend in the street.  
										I chanced on some information that will interest you.  
										At last he chanced to sail back towards the place from which he had started.  
										He chanced to meet a clerk who had overheard the conversation.  
										I chanced on him last week for the first time in years.  
										I chanced across him in a metro station.  
										I chanced to see our old headmaster in the street the other day.  
										I chanced on my ring lost ten days ago.  
										I chanced upon a friend of yours in the library.  
										It chanced that someone found the lost ring.  
										It so happened chanced that I'd met her a few years before.  
										I was looking for the book I wanted, and chanced upon another with the same title.  
										It chanced that he was on the playground when I came over to visit him.