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occasion (n.)

late 14c., occasioun, "opportunity; grounds for action or feeling; state of affairs that makes something else possible; a happening, occurrence leading to some result," from Old French ochaison, ocasion "cause, reason, excuse, pretext; opportunity" (13c.) or directly from Latin occasionem (nominative occasio) "opportunity, appropriate time," in Late Latin "cause," from occasum, occasus, past participle of occidere "fall down, go down," from ob "down, away" (see ob-) + -cidere, combining form of cadere "to fall" (from PIE root *kad- "to fall"). The notion is of a "falling together," or juncture, of circumstances. The sense of "the time or a time at which something happens" is from 1560s.

occasion (v.)

mid-15c., occasionen, "to bring (something) about, be the cause of (something)," from occasion (n.), or else from Old French occasionner "to cause," from Medieval Latin occasionare, from Latin occasionem (see occasion (n.)). Related: Occasioned; occasioning.

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Definitions of occasion from WordNet
1
occasion (n.)
an event that occurs at a critical time;
it was needed only on special occasions
Synonyms: juncture
occasion (n.)
a vaguely specified social event;
an occasion arranged to honor the president
Synonyms: affair / social occasion / function / social function
occasion (n.)
reason;
there was no occasion for complaint
occasion (n.)
the time of a particular event;
on the occasion of his 60th birthday
occasion (n.)
an opportunity to do something;
there was never an occasion for her to demonstrate her skill
2
occasion (v.)
give occasion to;
From wordnet.princeton.edu