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Definitions

anticipate

[an-tis-uh-peyt] / ænˈtɪs əˌpeɪt /




Usage

What are other ways to say anticipate?

To anticipate is to look forward to an event and even to picture it: Do you anticipate trouble? To expect something implies confidently believing, usually for good reasons, that an event will occur: to expect a visit from a friend. To hope for something implies a wish that an event may take place and an expectation that it will: to hope for the best. To await (wait for) something implies being alert and ready, whether for good or evil: to await news after a cyclone.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“It is like a giant chess game, in which we need to continue to keep trying to anticipate the next movement, and to overcome it to plan our next move,” Grant told me.

From Slate • May 18, 2026

Tourism projections anticipate 98,000 visitors by 2029, and more than one million by 2055.

From Barron's • May 18, 2026

This comes as investors anticipate greater fiscal spending and higher government debt under a new prime minister, they say.

From The Wall Street Journal • May 12, 2026

The AI boom has restructured the cost of computing in ways that traditional SaaS economics did not anticipate.

From MarketWatch • May 11, 2026

America's nuclear gambit had kept Stalin in check, but the crisis in Berlin underscored the need to anticipate the USSR's next move.

From "Spies: The Secret Showdown Between America and Russia" by Marc Favreau




Vocabulary lists containing anticipate


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