Expound in a sentence as a verb

Meanwhile, people expound on how simple and elegant Rails is.

" quoth Gurth; "expound that to me, Wamba, for my brain is too dull, and my mind too vexed, to read riddles.

If it's for the same reason as the submission, do you have anything to expound on?

]\nFrom this thin stuff the authors then get plenty of column space to expound on their opinions.

Maybe I'm just thick as a board tonight, but while you wrote a lot, you don't really seem to have explained "the solution to rent seeking" as you see it. Can you expound?

He had movie star looks and a brilliant mind and was the perfect figure to expound Hinduism to the West.

Those who apply the rule to particular cases, must of necessity expound and interpret that rule.

In this case you're simply wrong to not even agree and cannot expound beyond a simple "No", like a 2 year old that doesn't want to share their drink box.

If the author found new services he thinks are better, I'd find it much more helpful as a reader if he actually expound on what makes the new choices so good.

I don't see any reason to expound on that other than to make a political, rather strongly libertarian-leaning, statement.

What about if they honestly are doing well and deserve more money?To expound upon the inflation bit. Whenever you do not give an employee a raise that matches inflation, you're decreasing his salary by decreasing its buying power.

Happy to dive into it if you are willing to expound a bit.> It's probably a whole lot like that automatically enumerated proof of the 4-color theorem.

Yes I can expound upon VisualBasic's ******** conceptions but playing around and making "Forms" was how I got really interested in programming as a career choice.

It is not my intention to sound conspiratorial or expound conspiracy theories, I'm simply try to state the underlying truism that this world isn't as neat, fair or rational as we would like it to be.

I'm not a lawyer and therefore not qualified to expound on what "Three-pronged Test" or "Doctrine" decides what qualifies as an invasion of privacy, but...If the cops could easily tell you were driving drunk, they'd pull you over and cuff you.

>if you'd bothered with any follow-through on these topics you'd have encountered a very different pictureWhy don't you expound on that very different picture instead of such a hand wavy kneejerk dismissal without any reasoning or references?

Expound definitions

verb

add details, as to an account or idea; clarify the meaning of and discourse in a learned way, usually in writing; "She elaborated on the main ideas in her dissertation"

See also: elaborate lucubrate expatiate exposit enlarge expand dilate

verb

state; "set forth one's reasons"

See also: exposit