The fact that he hung back doesn't of itself mean that, when he did speak, it would necessarily be in a manner that foresaw refusal. |
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Yes, exactly - it's a step further in the narrator's understanding of how Josh feels.
I think "unexpectant" is just nicely at the point where it may not be in common use, but we have enough words related to it - unexpected, expectant, and un- being perhaps the most widely and naturally used prefix, that no reader would have a problem with it.
Incidentally, I've just tried the link to your latest full blog but the link comes up 'error'. |
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Thanks, Wordsmithreen. I wondered why I hadn't got any hits through from here...
I've corrected it now, but if you still want to have a look at it, to save you the bother, it's here:
http://emmadarwin.typepad.com/thisitchofwriting/2013/01/composting-dreaming-and-other-hard-work.html<Added>Re unexpectant, it is a word:
OED gives:
1811 Wordsworth Epist. to Sir G. H. Beaumont 209 "Not unexpectant that by early day Our little Band would thrid this mountain-way."
1881 E. F. Poynter Among the Hills II. 84 "Abashed by the unexpectant calm that met her."
and under "un-" as a prefix says:
Un-
Expressing negation. The prefix has been very extensively employed in English, as in the other Germanic languages, and is now the one which can be used with the greatest freedom in new formations...
Un- is freely prefixed to adjectives of all kinds, except where a Latin form in in-, etc., has definitely established itself in common use.