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  • word choice - Expect +to VS expect + ing - English Language Usage . . .
    The verb to expect always takes an infinitive complement: I expect it to rain They expect us to present tomorrow This is the normal way of forming sentences with expect Your last example above is, as you suspected, grammatically incorrect: *I will expect you doing well The other example that you gave with expect + -ing is something
  • word choice - Expected of vs. expected from - English Language . . .
    Expected of implies a movement of after-the-fact anticipation in the direction from the subject to the object of expectation Expected from implies movement from the object to the subject of expectation I expect of you will have done as anticipated you should I expect from you that the payment you promised will arrive in my hand from yours
  • What is the difference between anticipate and expect?
    Expect is to foresee something will happen, with that you show no opposition, and sometimes you want that to happen I expect there will be two scientists to join our team I expect I shall have two birthday gifts tomorrow But normally we won’t say I expect the disaster will come
  • word usage - Expect followed by S + will + V? - English Language . . .
    Our customers expect good service Your example, "I expect he will be at the party", conveys the sense that he should, by rights, be at the party Perhaps it is his own birthday party, for example In this case, substituting "think" for "expect" changes the meaning of the sentence
  • word choice - Usage of expect to and expectation to of - English . . .
    In "I expect to see you," to is introducing the infinitive "to see" It happens to be the way that the verb expect works that it takes an infinitive When you rearrange the sentence to start "With the expectation ", expectation is a noun It doesn't get to take an infinitive, so that rule doesn't apply
  • expecting a baby - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Can I say "we are expecting a baby" when my wife is pregnant or does that sound funny to native English speakers, saying it as a man? (In German, the phrase has become somewhat common, but it stills
  • phrases - I expect John to x vs I expect John will x - English Language . . .
    Second, expect can take both infinitive and tensed (that) complement clauses Other verbs differ Third, the grammatical sentences with will above don't have that, but it's allowed --these are correct, because expect, think, and know can all take tensed complement clauses: I expect think know that [John will reply to your email] (no 1)
  • negation - Expect: + that-clause vs + to-infinitive - English . . .
    "I expect J will not come" is a prediction "I expect J not to come" indicates that the speaker will be annoyed of disappointed if J does come In British English the difference in meaning between the "that" clause and the infinitive is very clear for "expect"
  • word choice - Using expecting vs predicting - English Language . . .
    'Expect' [regard (something) as likely to happen] refers to someone's thought about a likely event 'Predict' [say or estimate that (a specified thing) will happen in the future or will be a consequence of something] refers to someone's forecast about a likely event You cannot predict something you have not pondered about, yet you can expect it
  • word choice - Expectations of vs. expectations for - English . . .
    There are some questions related to this topic (Usage of "expect to" and "expectation to of" and "Need of" vs "need for"), but I haven't found one directly addressing this word combination I'm trying to determine whether I should use "expectations of" or "expectations for," in the following: I had to reevaluate my expectations of myself





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