expose / ɪkˈspoʊz /

💦中学词汇揭发揭露暴露揭穿

expose 的定义

v. 有主动词 verb

ex·posed, ex·pos·ing.

  1. to lay open to danger, attack, harm, etc.: to expose soldiers to gunfire; to expose one's character to attack.
  2. to lay open to something specified: to expose oneself to the influence of bad companions.
  3. to uncover or bare to the air, cold, etc.: to expose one's head to the rain.
  4. to present to view; exhibit; display: The storekeeper exposed his wares.
  5. to make known, disclose, or reveal.
  6. to reveal or unmask: to expose a swindler.
  7. to hold up to public reprehension or ridicule.
  8. to desert in an unsheltered or open place; abandon, as a child.
  9. to subject, as to the action of something: to expose a photographic plate to light.

expose 近义词

v. 动词 verb

subject to danger

v. 动词 verb

reveal

更多expose例句

  1. In 2016, São Paulo accidentally exposed the medical information of 365,000 patients from the public health system.
  2. It’s exposing the cost structure, and we need to evaluate how much you can charge for food.
  3. So far in 2020, the highest converting articles from LinkedIn are a piece on how the economic crisis will expose a decade’s worth of corporate fraud, and one on the gulf between the stock market and the real economy.
  4. TV ratings have long served as the only way networks could tell advertisers how many and, broadly, what type of viewers were exposed to their ads.
  5. Keep in mind that the towels will shrink slightly after they’re first exposed to water.
  6. Shirtless bros with pillowy lips and cargo pants pulled down to expose tufts of pubic hair.
  7. When MTV first started airing The Real World, it was meant to expose the brutal truth about human nature.
  8. However, this practice does potentially expose hunters to the pathogens carried on these animals.
  9. Drones need be matched with deeds that expose the false precepts of Al Qaeda's narrative.
  10. He praised Snowden for having the “balls” to expose the crimes of the NSA.
  11. He should give the bailee notice of all the faults in the thing bailed that would expose him to danger or loss in keeping it.
  12. The pair told Ritter what they thought of him, and each declared that he was going to expose the bully to Captain Putnam.
  13. Biggert was killed because he was about to expose somebody who had forged that check which is lying on your desk.
  14. In old times he would have been exposed as soon as he came into the world; and to expose him would have been a kindness.
  15. Each reindeer had fought too many battles to expose himself to such blows.