The verb 'expect' entered English around 1560 from Latin 'exspectāre' (also written 'expectāre'), meaning 'to look out for, to await, to hope for.' The Latin verb is composed of 'ex-' (out, outward) and 'spectāre' (to look at, to keep looking, to watch), which is the frequentative form of 'specere' (to look at). The frequentative suffix marks repeated or sustained action, so 'exspectāre' literally means 'to keep looking outward' — an evocative image of someone scanning the horizon for an anticipated arrival.
The word belongs to the vast 'specere' family, sharing its Proto-Indo-European root *speḱ- (to observe) with 'inspect,' 'suspect,' 'respect,' 'prospect,' 'aspect,' 'spectacle,' 'spectrum,' 'species,' and 'speculate.' Within this family, 'expect' is distinguished by the prefix 'ex-' (out), which directs the gaze outward — toward the future, toward what has not yet arrived but is anticipated.
The semantic range of the Latin original was broader than the modern English word. 'Exspectāre' meant not only 'to expect' (regard as likely) but also 'to await' (wait for) and 'to hope for' (desire the arrival of). These three senses — expectation, waiting, and hope — are closely related but distinct in English, which has split them across separate words. The Romance languages preserve the original unity more faithfully: Spanish 'esperar' and Portuguese 'esperar' still carry all
The noun 'expectation' (from Latin 'exspectātiōnem') entered English around the same time as the verb. It quickly became a word of considerable philosophical and literary weight. In probability theory, 'expected value' (or 'mathematical expectation') was formalized by Christiaan Huygens in 1657, creating a precise technical meaning for a word that had previously been purely qualitative. The 'expected value' is the probability-weighted average of all possible
In literature, 'expectation' became a central theme. Dickens's 'Great Expectations' (1861) uses the word as a term of art for a financial inheritance — the 'expectations' that Pip receives from a mysterious benefactor. The title's irony lies in the gap between what Pip expects (wealth, social elevation, happiness) and what he ultimately finds. This gap between expectation and reality is one of the great recurring subjects of narrative fiction.
The phrase 'expecting' as a euphemism for pregnancy ('she's expecting') dates from the mid-eighteenth century. The usage captures the anticipatory quality of pregnancy — the nine months of looking ahead to an arrival. More recently, 'expectant mother' and 'expectant father' have become standard medical and social terms.
The adjective 'unexpected' is formed by the native English negative prefix 'un-' attached to the past participle 'expected.' This hybrid formation — a Germanic prefix on a Latin stem — is characteristic of English, which freely combines morphemes from different source languages. 'Unexpected' has become one of the most common adjectives in the language, appearing in everything from philosophical discussions of contingency to weather reports.
In psychology, expectation plays a central role in theories of perception, motivation, and emotion. The 'expectancy violation theory,' developed by Judee Burgoon in 1978, describes how people respond when events deviate from their expectations. The 'placebo effect' is partly driven by expectation: patients who expect a treatment to work experience real physiological changes. These findings suggest that expectation is not