No. Anticipation is a noun.
No. It can be a verb or an adjective. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to anticipate) and can act as an adjective meaning forecast or predicted.
Jack was looking at Jenny with anticipation.
The noun apprehension (uneasy anticipation) takes the following common suffixes: adjective : apprehensive adverb: apprehensively secondary noun: apprehensiveness The verb apprehend (take into custody) has the following suffixes: adjective: apprehended adjective: apprehensible gerund : apprehending personal noun: apprehender
There is no abstract noun form of the adjective 'thick'.The noun form of the adjective 'thick' is thickness, a concrete noun, a word for a physical property, a physical density.The noun 'thickness' can be used in an abstract context, for example:A thickness of anticipation could be felt throughout the audience.
A smirk of anticipation is a slight smile given when someone thinks something will happen.
anticipatory
No. It can be a verb or an adjective. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to anticipate) and can act as an adjective meaning forecast or predicted.
Jack was looking at Jenny with anticipation.
Anticipation - song - was created in 1971.
With Anticipation Stakes was created in 2005.
You should say "thank you in anticipation of your kind assistance." This is the correct phrasing to express gratitude for help that is yet to be given.
Anticipation - advertisement - was created in 1994-05.
Anticipation wasn't an album it was a mixtape
I waited in anticipation that my claim for compensation would be agreed.
There is no abstract noun form of the adjective 'thick'.The noun form of the adjective 'thick' is thickness, a concrete noun, a word for a physical property, a physical density.The noun 'thickness' can be used in an abstract context, for example:A thickness of anticipation could be felt throughout the audience.
The noun apprehension (uneasy anticipation) takes the following common suffixes: adjective : apprehensive adverb: apprehensively secondary noun: apprehensiveness The verb apprehend (take into custody) has the following suffixes: adjective: apprehended adjective: apprehensible gerund : apprehending personal noun: apprehender
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