dont to hear next week i expect from them before
Answers
Step-by-step explanation:
Expect
We use expect to say that we believe that something will happen. We use expect in the following main patterns:
expect + object:
She’s expecting a second baby.
expect + to-infinitive:
We expect to move into our new flat next week.
expect + that-clause:
We expected that the guest house would have much better rooms.
expect + object + to-infinitive:
The company expects her to be early.
Expect also means ‘think’ or ‘suppose’. When expect has this meaning, we do not commonly use it in the continuous form:
A:
Will he have bought the necklace by now?
B:
I expect so.
Not: I’m expecting so.
I expect that he’ll be wearing that bright blue shirt.
Not: I am expecting …
When we expect that something will not happen or is not true, expect is most commonly used in a negative form:
I don’t expect she will pass the exam. (preferred to I expect she won’t pass …)
Hope
We use hope when we do not know whether something will happen or not but we want it to happen. We use hope in the following patterns:
hope + to-infinitive:
I think you were hoping to see your family next week.
hope + that clause:
I hope that your sister recovers quickly from the operation.
hope + for:
[parents discussing the birth of their next child]
We’ve already got two boys so we’re hoping for a girl.
We use hope to express good intentions and wishes for the future: