Random House Webster's College Dictionary
1. (adv.) haply
perhaps; by chance.
Definition of 'haply' Princeton's WordNet
1. (adverb) haply, by chance, by luck
by accident
"betrayed by a word haply overheard"
Definition of 'haply' Webster Dictionary
1. (adverb) haply
by hap, chance, luck, or accident; perhaps; it may be
Here you go. I'm reading Shakespeare myself and searched it up
metaphor
sleepwalkers
Words. Or in certain rare cases, one word. But there is always at least one word. The best one-word line is from King John: "Death." There are some pretty good two-word lines, such as the opening line from Hamlet: "Who's there?" or Beatrice's line from Much Ado About Nothing: "Kill Claudio."
to recieve
No such word exists.
"Haply" is an archaic word that means "by chance" or "by accident." It implies that the chance was a fortunate one for the listener, and that the listener will gain in some way from it.
Anon
talk you talk
metaphor
sleepwalkers
The German word for "talk" (assuming this is the noun) is: "Gespräch". If you mean the verb "to talk", then it's "reden".
it means to talk
to talk to someone
speak
That could be interlocution, dialog, chat, discussion, or talk.
It means: speak or talk
small talk