Expose in a sentence as a noun

Maybe I am being pretentious, but I swear I am just trying to help and expose my thoughts on the subject.

After getting exposed to it again for a few months again I've come to side with the author here.

Instead, ask the questions that you feel would expose the inconsistency.

It has now cost us a two-year window in which 70% of our internet traffic was potentially exposed.

They do not have the right to expose classified information because they think it shouldn't be classified.

That is to say, the team must plan and design to be able to expose the interface to developers in the outside world.

Dr. Martin \n Luther King Jr., threatening to expose his extramarital\n affairs if he did not commit *******.\n\nHoooooly ****.

And if I wrote C# or VB or anything in WinForms, it'll also still work, and it can use COM objects I export from my old C++ app, and expose COM objects to my old C++ app.

Expose in a sentence as a verb

It uses gears on the inside to pull a regularroll of film through and expose it through a narrow vertical slit as you rotate the whole camera on its center axis.

This means that a wanton malefactor such as Best Buy here had better watch out if it meets a determined adversary who is willing to play out the fight and expose its wrongs.

That's a very dangerous capability to expose to adversaries.

Note to young videographers: When a company asks whether you're working on an expose, the phrase "Im interested in issues of class, race, and labor" will not defuse the situation.

Barack Obama will strengthen whistleblower laws to protect federal workers who expose waste, fraud, and abuse of authority in government.

Our general plan here is to expose nearly everything in NewsGator Online via API, and allow folks to build applications that leverage our platform in unique ways.

It is a government that is increasingly relying on citizen ignorance to secretly make and implement policy, and on savage reprisals to terrorize those who might expose the process.

Expose definitions

noun

the exposure of an impostor or a fraud; "he published an expose of the graft and corruption in city government"

See also: unmasking

verb

expose or make accessible to some action or influence; "Expose your students to art"; "expose the blanket to sunshine"

verb

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"; "unwrap the evidence in the murder case"

verb

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"

See also: exhibit display

verb

remove all or part of one's clothes to show one's body; "uncover your belly"; "The man exposed himself in the subway"

See also: uncover

verb

disclose to view as by removing a cover; "The curtain rose to disclose a stunning set"

See also: disclose

verb

put in a dangerous, disadvantageous, or difficult position

See also: queer scupper endanger peril

verb

expose to light, of photographic film

verb

expose while ridiculing; especially of pretentious or false claims and ideas; "The physicist debunked the psychic's claims"

See also: debunk

verb

abandon by leaving out in the open air; "The infant was exposed by the teenage mother"; "After Christmas, many pets get abandoned"