Unhap

Un`hap´


n.1.Ill luck; misfortune.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
References in periodicals archive ?
I thought I would rather be a happy and unsuccessful novelist than being an unhappy, successful NHS worker - not that I was desperately unhap" His idea for the story began when he read a magazine obituary for Henry Molaison, who died in December 2008 at the age of 82, having been unable to form any new memories following an operation when just 27 years old.
If Deila gives the Scot then od, If Deila gives the Scot then od, Zaluska is going to be unhap py Zaluska is going to be unhap py and while his reaction would be and while his reaction would be understandable, it's a harsh fact of understandable, it's a harsh fact of football that you don't alway s get football that you don't alway s get what you want.
and 5ive relic Ritchie Neville sighed: "There's serious unhap piness here to the point that people are cracking up." And that's just the viewers.
Civic solidarity is consistent with the work ethics of the guilds: "when a guild brother.., fell into poverty or could not work, or went blind, or lost his goods 'by the unhap of the world; "his fellows supported him until the end of his days.
This unhap py result is surprisingly common even after millions have been spent on software and technology support for finance.