Plants do not have a nervous system to feel or anticipate danger in the same way animals do. However, they can respond to environmental cues like changes in light, temperature, or the presence of harmful substances by triggering physical or chemical defense mechanisms. This is more of a passive response rather than an anticipation of danger.
The speaker anticipates objections to his proposal that the children of the poor be sold as a food source, such as moral concerns about cannibalism and the exploitation of the impoverished. He presents these objections to refute them with his satirical argument.
What? Either this question contains typos, or it isn't punctuated correctly, or it was written by a non-native speaker of English--because it's incomprehensible.
they never imagined the extent of the horrors that were to come during the Holocaust. They were in denial about the reality of the situation and believed that the danger would pass without affecting them directly. They did not anticipate the true scale and brutality of the genocide that was about to unfold.
No, it is a noun. It is related to the verb "to anticipate."
The word "anticipate" is a verb.
Anticipate is a verb.
When do you anticipate his arrival- When do you expect him-
This question is not about the mission. Otherwise the only way a penguin is in danger is the penguin account. For getting stolen, banned, etc.
TE
"I will anticipate your next move," Said John.
The word anticipate is a verb. The past tense is anticipated.