Synonym: disclose, display, open, reveal, show, uncover, unmask. Antonym: conceal, cover, hide. Similar words: exposure, export, pose, compose, oppose, suppose, impose, opposed. Meaning: [ɪk'spəʊz] n. the exposure of an impostor or a fraud. v. 1. expose or make accessible to some action or influence 2. make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret 3. to show, make visible or apparent 4. remove all or part of one's clothes to show one's body 5. disclose to view as by removing a cover 6. put in a dangerous, disadvantageous, or difficult position 7. expose to light, of photographic film 8. expose while ridiculing; especially of pretentious or false claims and ideas 9. abandon by leaving out in the open air.
Random good picture Not show
31) A neutral presentation would expose the difference and show that the delegation of authority does not imply the forfeiture of ultimate control.
32) Failure to give you a fair deal in this respect is likely to expose a company to legal attack.
33) They objected to materials that expose children to feminism, witchcraft, pacifism, vegetarianism, and situational ethics.
34) In fact, it's quite useful to expose him to people from outside the Unit, within reason.
35) This book might be an unputdownable expose of London's underworld(sentencedict.com/expose.html), but its moral message is highly dubious.
36) The directors, however, could argue that to do so would expose the company to adverse publicity.
37) I hated to expose myself, to emerge, to stick out.
38) I really expected to see the black pajamas, conical hats, and the small children scatter and expose the gunner.
39) They had no wish to expose their only child to the disease.
40) Once you expose these to the New York atmosphere for three or four months, you can not tell them apart.
41) Given the power of the managerial hierarchy to dispense or withhold rewards, open acts of defiance expose individuals to reprisal.
42) New challenges summon up fresh resources, or expose areas in which resources are lacking.
43) It leads to death and a scandalous murder inquiry which threatens to expose some dark secrets.
44) It will expose our economy to unacceptable risks and should not be adopted.
45) They also developed a plan to expose the statement through discussions with three or four groups of middle level managers at Mega.
46) In some cases, a physical might expose a heart murmur.
47) Similarly, workfare might expose people to the stigma and frequent humiliations that are damaging to health.
48) Asthma, heart conditions, diabetes or epilepsy may expose you to special risks with watersports in the heat.
49) A person's power to confer rights on others by his consent does, however, expose him to blackmail and abuse.
50) The boy lifted his T-shirt to expose a jagged scar across his belly.
51) You do not try to catch them out, to trap them or to expose them as inadequate in any way.
52) It has announced its intention not to borrow and therefore will not expose investors to levels of high gearing.
53) Don't expose babies under six months to strong sunlight at all; after that they should wear a strong water-resistant sunblock.
54) The purpose of the surveys is to expose consensus and conflicts about popular values for green spaces close to the city.
55) Our friend looked at them, then lifted the leaves to expose a lovely row of radishes we never knew we had!
56) They claim the expulsions were a cover-up bid after they tried to expose a slush fund run by crooked officials.
57) So a government scientist, whom out of modesty I forbear to name, had to expose the fraud.
58) Its effect is to expose to restraining action in the courts any local authority activity not backed by statutory authority.
59) Drawings are produced by scraping away the ink to expose the china clay surface.
60) Children are a wonderful gift. They have an extraordinary capacity to see into the heart of things and to expose sham and humbug for what they are. Desmond Tutu