wait and see
Bide one's time for events to run their course, as in Do you think they'll raise taxes?—We'll have to wait and see. This expression was first recorded in Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (1719): “We had no remedy but to wait and see.” In Britain the phrase became associated with Prime Minister H.H. Asquith, who in 1910 so often said it to the opposition regarding an impending bill that he became known as “Old Wait and See.”
Words nearby wait and see
waistcoating,
waisted,
waistline,
wait,
wait a minute,
wait and see,
wait at table,
wait for the other shoe to drop,
wait on,
wait on hand and foot,
wait out
Example sentences from the Web for wait and see
Web-savvy young activists—the kind of people that were key to the movement in Egypt—seem to be taking a wait-and-see approach.