anticipation meaning
EN[æn.tɪs.əˈpe.ʃən] [-eɪʃən]WAnticipation
- Anticipation, or being enthusiastic, is an emotion involving pleasure, excitement, and sometimes anxiety in considering some expected or longed-for good event.
FR anticipation
- NounPLanticipationsPREanti-SUF-ation
- The act of anticipating, taking up, placing, or considering something beforehand, or before the proper time in natural order.
- Often the anticipation of a shot is worse than the pain of the stick.
- The eagerness associated with waiting for something to occur.
- He waited with great anticipation for Christmas to arrive.
- (finance) Prepayment of a debt, generally in order to pay less interest.
- (rhetoric) Prolepsis.
- (music) A non-harmonic tone that is lower or higher than a note in the previous chord and a unison to a note in the next chord.
- (obsolete) Hasty notion; intuitive preconception.
- The act of anticipating, taking up, placing, or considering something beforehand, or before the proper time in natural order.
- More Examples
- Used in the Middle of Sentence
- Thus the festival-goer is tangibly and emotionally 'freed' from routine and enters willingly and with anticipation into a temporally and spatially special environment.
- Amid all the fevered anticipation of this fixture, few would have expected to witness an aesthetically pleasing example of the beautiful game.
- Thus, anxiety anticipation is vital to the pathopsychological mechanism of SAD.
- Used in the Middle of Sentence
Definition of anticipation in English Dictionary
- Part-of-Speech Hierarchy
- Nouns
- Countable nouns
- Countable nouns
- Nouns
Source: Wiktionary