The word "expected" refers to something that is anticipated or thought to happen based on prior knowledge or experience. It implies a level of prediction or belief that an event or outcome is likely to occur. In various contexts, it can relate to outcomes in everyday situations, formal agreements, or statistical predictions.
No, unlike the word expected, it is not used as a verb. It is an adjective.
Boring, plain, ordinary, same, usual, expected
Minimum Expected Regret ( EVPI = Expected Regret of the best solution)
You should not exceed the posted speed limit on residential streets. Deaths from the typhoon were expected to exceed those from the previous storm.
The word "due" pairs well with "toss" to convey the idea of something that is owed or required. For example, one might say "toss due" in a context where something is expected to be returned or given.
The prefix word for expected is "un-," which creates the word "unexpected."
The word "expected" is not the same as "required". Something that is "expected" is something that is assumed will occur. Something that is "required" is something that is essential.
Tagalog translation of expected: inasahan
No, it is not. It is a verb (to expect: to anticipate or consider likely).
Expected means "anticipated." Condensed vapor is "liquid/"
the root word for unexpected is expected
Predictable: someone who exhibits behavior that is expected.
it is an expected
"Hataserukana" is the most common here in Japan for the word " as expected"
awaited, hoped-for, expected
Surprise or unexpected. Those words mean earlier than expected.
Opposite of expected would be unexpected, surprising. Opposite of deliberate would be accidental, randomly.