Noun(1) the exposure of an impostor or a fraud
Verb(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) reveal 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(10) to show(11) make visible or apparent(12) disclose to view as by removing a cover(13) put in a dangerous(14) disadvantageous(15) or difficult position(16) expose to light
Noun(1) the exposure of an impostor or a fraud
Verb(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) reveal 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(10) to show(11) make visible or apparent(12) disclose to view as by removing a cover(13) put in a dangerous(14) disadvantageous(15) or difficult position(16) expose to light
(1) The overwhelming musical score and the too consistent whirling dervish camera only work to expose the film's desperate bid to keep its core vapidity under wraps.(2) I mainly use the meter setting of 3200 at the camera to expose the film.(3) Those issues aside, many citizens want the tribunals to be very public - both to expose the past's horrors and to prove that justice is done.(4) Real whistleblowers expose wrongdoing while it is going on.(5) Yet he loves to expose those in the public eye, especially Tory politicians, for sleaze.(6) Most anywhere on the long expanse of the north shore side of the Cape which uncovers at low tides to expose sand flats can be productive.(7) The scientists suspect that the sand formed when water levels fell low enough to expose quartz rock, so that wind and rain could weather the rock into sand.(8) We have seen that similar roles of the press are developing there too as media expose corruption.(9) As well as eroding land on visible sites, high winds are blowing off topsoil and sands which expose undiscovered sites which are then quickly washed away, said Dawson.(10) Perhaps they are just too shy and tender to expose their sensitive and creative sides to the cruel world.(11) Losing the vote would not mean the end of his government, but would be an embarrassment and expose the fissures within the 20-party ruling coalition.(12) It consisted of a lavender shirt that draped off the shoulders, exposing them completely, and it was very low cut.(13) A man was seen to be indecently exposing himself along a footpath.(14) The children would add information to the projects as they were exposed to new knowledge.(15) Her work makes excellent use of what looks like badly exposed outdated Polaroid film.(16) The Stevens report has exposed what that means - the state organising and covering up the murder of innocent people.