unsurprise

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

un- +‎ surprise

Noun[edit]

unsurprise (countable and uncountable, plural unsurprises)

  1. Absence of surprise.
    • 2017, Robert Power, Tell it to the Dog: a memoir of sorts, →ISBN:
      And there, in the shadows of the hallway, was my mother, looking up, unsurprised, in this house of unsurprises.

Verb[edit]

unsurprise (third-person singular simple present unsurprises, present participle unsurprising, simple past and past participle unsurprised)

  1. (rare) To not surprise: to reverse the surprise of, or fail to surprise.
    • 2013, John D. Lee, Alex Kirlik, The Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Engineering, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 405:
      To summarize, theories about learning from failure depict a rather straightforward process:
      The surprise of failure is followed by a systematic assessment to “unsurprise the past.” Once the part, or otherwise malfunctioning component, has been identified, learning from failure is a question of figuring out new, more functional cause-effect relationships.
    • 2014, S.R. Palumbo, Passion Flower, →ISBN, page 148:
      “Then try to unsurprise yourself.” But Gienna couldn't remember a thing. His mind went blank. He had thought about her continuously and pictured her a thousand times every moment he was away from her—even dreamed about her—and how the fuck could he not remember a thing like that? “Is this supposed to be the message?” “Tell me the color.” “Dark,” he said. “Sort of brownish-black.”