With success comes expectation and I know the expectation on me is going to be pretty high.
Faith is inseparable from expectations. Where there is real faith, there is always expectation.
Fate often allows a future to take shape with no regard for our expectation, plan, or readiness. Fate's skillful editing of our life choices is like the careful grooming of lads on their first day of school: combed, polished, scrubbed, newly dressed, and glowing too. This is how we become ready for our life lessons.
Her little butterfly soul fluttered incessantly between memory and dubious expectation.
Opportunity meets you at your level of expectation.
The mathematical expectation of the speculator is zero.
All the keys to joy can be reduced to these two. Laugh but at no one's expense and love but without expectation.
In a gallery, there's an expectation of high prices and a somewhat elitist atmosphere.
My expectation is that technology always changes.
You stand for what is right, Lina, without the expectation of gratitude or reward.
When we give from a place of love, rather than from a place of expectation, more usually comes back to us than we could ever have imagined.
I'm afraid to live any place but in expectation. I'm no life-risk.
There is no harm in anybody thinking that Christ is in bread. The harm is in the expectation of His presence in gunpowder.
The greatest loss of time is delay and expectation. I never yet talked to the man who wanted to save time who could tell me what he was going to do with the time he saved.
Music has been already devalued by the consumer. There's an expectation that it should be free so the race to the bottom has already been won.
Always God’s goodness is the ground of our expectation.
There's something about looking at society's expectation of what [motherhood] is and tipping it.
Augustus was sensible that mankind is governed by names; nor was he deceived in his expectation, that the senate and people would submit to slavery, provided they were respectfully assured that they still enjoyed their ancient freedom.
I lived through the Cold War as a child, and we always thought a nuclear bomb could end life everywhere at any time. On one hand, it created an atmosphere where you lived for the moment - because it could end at any second - but on the other, it warped a generation into thinking t there was no reasonable expectation of building a future that could be vaporized at any moment by a few morons.
The theory of the indirect approach operates on the line of least expectation.