| expose | abandon by leaving out in the open air; "The infant was exposed by the teenage mother"; "After Christmas, many pets get abandoned" | en |
| expose | reveal, uncover, disclose; abandon fiil | en |
| expose | expose or make accessible to some action or influence; "Expose your students to art"; "expose the blanket to sunshine" | en |
| expose | expose to light, of photographic film to show, make visible or apparent; "The Metropolitan Museum is exhibiting Goya's works this month"; "Why don't you show your nice legs and wear shorter skirts?"; "National leaders will have to display the highest skills of statesmanship | en |
| expose | the exposure of an impostor or a fraud; "he published an expose of the graft and corruption in city government" abandon by leaving out in the open air; "The infant was exposed by the teenage mother"; "After Christmas, many pets get abandoned" expose or make accessible to some action or influence; "Expose your students to art"; "expose the blanket to sunshine" expose to light, of photographic film to show, make visible or apparent; "The Metropolitan Museum is exhibiting Goya's works this month"; "Why don't you show your nice legs and wear shorter skirts?"; "National leaders will have to display the highest skills of statesmanship | en |
| expose | To disclose the faults or reprehensible practices of; to lay open to general condemnation or contempt by making public the character or arts of; as, to expose a cheat, liar, or hypocrite | en |
| expose | To deprive of concealment; to discover; to lay open to public inspection, or bring to public notice, as a thing that shuns publicity, something criminal, shameful, or the like; as, to expose the faults of a neighbor | en |
| expose | to uncover, make visible, bring to daylight, introduce to | en |
| expose | to subject photographic film to light thus ruining it or taking a picture if controlled | en |
| expose | To lay bare; to lay open to attack, danger, or anything objectionable; to render accessible to anything which may affect, especially detrimentally; to make liable; as, to expose one's self to the heat of the sun, or to cold, insult, danger, or ridicule; to expose an army to destruction or defeat | en |
| expose | To set forth; to set out to public view; to exhibit; to show; to display; as, to expose goods for sale; to expose pictures to public inspection | en |
| expose | expose while ridiculing; especially of pretentious or false claims and ideas; "The physicist debunked the psychic's claims" | en |
| expose | the exposure of an impostor or a fraud; "he published an expose of the graft and corruption in city government" | en |
| expose | If someone is exposed to something dangerous or unpleasant, they are put in a situation in which it might affect them. They had not been exposed to most diseases common to urban populations A wise mother never exposes her children to the slightest possibility of danger. people exposed to high levels of radiation | en |
| expose | To expose a person or situation means to reveal that they are bad or immoral in some way. The Budget does expose the lies ministers were telling a year ago He has simply been exposed as an adulterer and a fool | en |
| expose | To expose something that is usually hidden means to uncover it so that it can be seen. Lowered sea levels exposed the shallow continental shelf beneath the Bering Sea the exposed brickwork | en |
| expose | expose to light, of photographic film | en |
| expose | A man who exposes himself shows people his genitals in a public place, usually because he is mentally or emotionally disturbed. Smith admitted indecently exposing himself on Wimbledon Common | en |
| expose | If someone is exposed to an idea or feeling, usually a new one, they are given experience of it, or introduced to it. local people who've not been exposed to glimpses of Western life before These units exposed children to many viewpoints of a given issue | en |
| expose | make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret; "The auction house would not disclose the price at which the van Gogh had sold"; "The actress won't reveal how old she is"; "bring out the truth"; "he broke the news to her" | en |
| expose | put in a dangerous, disadvantageous, or difficult position | en |
| expose | remove all or part of one's clothes to show one's body; "uncover your belly"; "The man exposed himself in the subway" | en |
| expose | disclose to view as by removing a cover; "The curtain rose to disclose a stunning set" | en |
| expose | to show, make visible or apparent; "The Metropolitan Museum is exhibiting Goya's works this month"; "Why don't you show your nice legs and wear shorter skirts?"; "National leaders will have to display the highest skills of statesmanship" | en |
| exposed | adj Describing a meld completed with a tile that another player discarded Same as Open (preferred) | en |
| exposed | Left unprotected | en |
| exposed | with no protection or shield; "the exposed northeast frontier"; "open to the weather"; "an open wound | en |
| exposed | Refers to an employee possibly endangered by a chemical because the chemical may have been permitted to enter that employee through some route of entry, i e ingestion, inhalation, absorption | en |
| exposed | not covered with clothing; "her exposed breast" | en |
| exposed | bare, naked, without covering or protection, vulnerable sıfat | en |
| exposed | If a place is exposed, it has no natural protection against bad weather or enemies, for example because it has no trees or is on very high ground. an exposed hillside in Connecticut | en |
| exposed | In epidemiology, the exposed group (or simply, the exposed) is often used to connote a group whose members have been exposed to a supposed cause of a disease or health state of interest or posses a characteristic that is a determinant of the health outcome of interest | en |
| exposed | with no protection or shield; "the exposed northeast frontier"; "open to the weather"; "an open wound" | en |
| exposed | A group whose members have been exposed to a supposed cause of disease or health state of interest, or possess a characteristic that is a determinant of the health outcome of interest | en |
| exposes | third-person singular of expose | en |
| exposing | present participle of expose | en |