: to become liable or subject to : bring down upon oneself
incur expenses
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Incur vs. Occur
Incur bears a strong family resemblance to another English verb, occur. If you are confused by their similarities, a glance back at their Latin roots might help you to tell them apart.
Both words have a common root in Latin currere, meaning “to run.” In the case of incur, currere was combined with Latin in “into,” which produced the meaning “to run into.” In English, the one who incurs, or “runs into,” is most often a person and the thing incurred is usually some self-inflicted negative consequence (such as a debt or somebody’s foul temper). The ancestor of occur, by contrast, paired Latin ob “in the way” with currere, producing the basic meaning “to run in the way of,” or “to present itself.” In English, the verb came to apply strictly to events, things, or ideas; something (such as a tornado) that occurs, or “presents itself,” appears or happens; a thought that occurs, or “presents itself” to someone, comes into that person’s mind.
To summarize: a person (or something composed of people, like a company) incurs, or becomes subject to, something negative; something occurs, or happens, or an idea occurs to, or comes into the mind of, someone.
Examples of incur in a Sentence
Submitting students to the rigors of learning seemed only to incur the wrath of many of them …—Ben Marcus, Time, 8 Jan. 2001Shakespeare … took plots and characters from wherever he pleased, rarely acknowledging sources, and he saw so little sanctity in his own words that anyone could print them who cared to incur the expense—which did not include royalties to Shakespeare.—Walter Kendrick, New York Times Book Review, 29 Oct. 1989To be too good-looking is sometimes to incur the dislike, if not the hatred, of the ordinary-looking.—Joseph Epstein, The Middle of My Tether, 1983
What did he do to incur such wrath?
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However, the update indicated that CMA CGM and Zim have still not made moves to shift their non-exempt ships, with the carriers potentially incurring bills of up to $37 million and $35 million respectively in the first 6 months.—Glenn Taylor, Sourcing Journal, 16 Sep. 2025 Yet the lack of an observance on Kirk’s death from about half the host clubs in week two of the NFL season incurred hostile coverage from right-wing media including The New York Post, Breitbart, and Fox News, which dutifully covered these programming choices as an insult to a great patriot.—Miles Klee, Rolling Stone, 16 Sep. 2025 Oil and gas are now sold farther from the well, and companies incur more transportation and other costs to get the products to the point of sale.—Jacob Orledge, ProPublica, 15 Sep. 2025 Not trying to push yourself too quickly to incur anything.—Barry Jackson, Miami Herald, 11 Sep. 2025 See All Example Sentences for incur
Word History
Etymology
Middle English incurren, from Latin incurrere, literally, to run into, from in- + currere to run — more at car
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