Exchange Currency

expect

verbto hope that something is going to happen ExamplesWe are expecting him to arrive at 10:45. • They are expecting a cheque from their agent next week. • The house was sold for more than the expected price."...he observed that he expected exports to grow faster than imports in the coming year" [Sydney Morning Herald]"American business as a whole has seen profits well above the levels normally expected at this stage of the cycle" [Sunday Times]

Related information about expect:
  1. Expect - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Expect is a Unix automation and testing tool, written by Don Libes as an extension to the Tcl scripting language, for interactive applications such as telnet, ftp, ...
     
  2. Expect - Expect - Home Page
    Expect is a tool for automating interactive applications such as telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, etc. Expect really makes this stuff trivial. Expect is also useful ...
     
  3. Expect
    Tcl package which enables mechanizing telnet, and ftp, ...
     
  4. Expect | Define Expect at Dictionary.com
    to look forward to; regard as likely to happen; anticipate the occurrence or the coming of: I expect to read it. I expect him later. She expects that they will come. 2 .
     
  5. expect - definition of expect by the Free Online Dictionary ...
    v. ex·pect·ed, ex·pect·ing, ex·pects. v.tr. 1. a. To look forward to the probable occurrence or appearance of: expecting a telephone call; expects rain on Sunday . b.
     
  6. Expect - Merriam-Webster Online
    to be pregnant : await the birth of one's child —used in progressive tenses <she's expecting next month>. transitive verb. 1. archaic : await. 2. : to anticipate or ...
     
  7. expect(1) - Linux man page
    The name "Expect" comes from the idea of send/expect sequences popularized by uucp, kermit and other modem control programs. However unlike uucp ...
     
  8. expect - Wiktionary
    From Latin expectāre, alternative form of exspectō (“look out for, await, expect”), from ex (“out”) + spectō (“look at”), frequentative of speciō (“see”).