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词汇 expose
释义

expose1

verb ɛkˈspəʊzɪkˈspəʊzɪkˈspoʊz
[with object]
  • 1Make (something) visible by uncovering it.

    使暴露;使显露

    at low tide the sands are exposed

    低潮时沙滩就会显露出来。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • 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.
    • Following winter storms, cobbles and rocky platforms are exposed, and the sand beach may only partially recover during the low waves of summer.
    • It consisted of a lavender shirt that draped off the shoulders, exposing them completely, and it was very low cut.
    • An open fracture is one in which the skin over the broken bone is cut, thus exposing the bone pieces to the elements.
    • Basil frowned, but before he could do anything, Sam reached out and ripped the towel off his shoulders, exposing the dark scars on the pale skin.
    • If your cut exposes the hollow portion of the door, you must reinstall the solid-wood rail from the cutoff.
    • The membrane was exposed for autoradiography and then probed with anti-HA.
    • He pressed a button and a door hissed open, exposing a long dark corridor that hardly looked big enough for a grown-up to walk in.
    • He was wearing different clothing now, ripped denim shorts and a cut up shirt exposing his stomach, and his hair was down now and flowed past his shoulder blades.
    • Having completed the cut, the dealer exposes a card to determine who will be dealt the first card.
    • He was a little taller, and had the regulation hair cut, exposing largish ears.
    • People are being warned not to enter the old camp at Killinthomas Wood outside Rathangan following an explosion during a fire at the site which exposed Asbestos.
    • The entire section was stripped naked, exposing the ship's innards to the cold expanse of space.
    • The low quality fish they dry on sand, exposing it to birds and animals, may not bring them good revenue.
    • The circle was only exposed at low tide, for two to five hours.
    • 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.
    • 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.
    • My midriff fully exposed as well as the back of my sports bra.
    • I keep the ripped side up so that I can remember which side was exposed to the blown sand all day, reminding me to flip it over at night before I lay down to sleep.
    • For example, the Martian polar caps exhibit extensive layers that have been exposed by subsequent erosion.
    Synonyms
    reveal, uncover, lay bare, bare, leave unprotected
    1. 1.1as adjective exposed Unprotected, especially from the weather.
      使无遮蔽(或保护)
      the coast is very exposed to the south-west

      海岸的西南面毫无遮挡。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Treated seed exposed on soil surfaces will be hazardous to birds and other wildlife.
      • The three-acre garden was created from an exposed open field now sheltered by hedges and fences.
      • Expect schizophrenic weather in this exposed, wind-wracked landscape.
      • A second category of landforms includes those that relate to the intense cryogenic weathering of exposed bedrock.
      • For the first time the civilian population throughout Britain and not just those in exposed coastal locations were vulnerable to attack.
      • The corals are inseparable from the matrix of the rocks and generally badly weathered on the exposed surfaces.
      • Water causes decay or rot of the wood and early failure of paint, and it accelerates the weathering of wood exposed outdoors.
      • There was something about this exposed, windswept piece of tarmac and turf which touched his soul.
      • What type of primer would you recommend based on mostly bare exposed wood?
      • It was also late September, winter only weeks away and the nights bitterly cold with snow falling on the barren and exposed mountain pass, over which now we would have to cross.
      • But before Chase could even respond, he suddenly felt the hot sharp steel of a weapon dabbing the base of his exposed and unprotected neck.
      • Complete oxeas and styles are rare but do occur scattered as weathered elements on exposed etched surfaces.
      • It is the programmer's responsibility to ensure that no wires are left exposed so that no damage can occur from the users of the structure.
      • The gusting wind muddied the open water of the exposed lake, and no activity was visible.
      • Fully exposed to the elements, this crumbling edifice was his training grounds.
      Synonyms
      unprotected, open, wide open, without shelter/protection, unsheltered, open to the elements/weather
      barren, bare, windswept
      vulnerable, defenceless, undefended, unshielded, susceptible
      rare pregnable
    2. 1.2often expose someone to Cause someone to be vulnerable or at risk.
      many newcomers are exposing themselves to injury

      许多初来乍到的人极易受到危及生命的伤害。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • They do the job because they want to help patients and make a difference to people, often when they are at their most exposed and vulnerable.
      • And he'll be riding thousands of miles, exposed on the open roads of their country!
      • I had read her secret diary; she should have been feeling exposed and vulnerable at least a little bit, right?
      • The plain was as flat as a tabletop, and she instinctively felt exposed and vulnerable, there being no possible way to conceal one's presence.
      • She wanted to protest, feeling more defenceless and exposed than ever with her back to any possible threat.
      • This attitude, at once exposed and cautious, open and liberated, characterizes her prose.
      • Never sit in front of or with your back to a door or window, which leaves you exposed and vulnerable.
      • When dawn came, I saw that my hiding place was no good - I was as exposed as a newborn baby.
      • Although most of us are not begging on the street with an open hand, are we not all pleading with an exposed and vulnerable heart to be received?
      • The wide open grass seemed strange, and they felt exposed and vulnerable after the comfortable shelter of the friendly forest.
      • To leave them thus open and exposed is to place temptation in the way of would - be looters and smugglers.
      • The earth lay open and exposed, its surface turned back like flaps of skin on a human chest, ready for surgery.
      Synonyms
      make vulnerable, make subject, subject, lay open
      put at risk of, put in jeopardy of, leave unprotected from
      endanger by, imperil by, jeopardize by
    3. 1.3expose someone to Introduce someone to (a subject or area of knowledge)
      students were exposed to statistics in high school
      Example sentencesExamples
      • During our quest for knowledge, we are exposed to a variety of research studies based on different research designs.
      • It brings a challenge but it exposes you to different business areas.
      • The children would add information to the projects as they were exposed to new knowledge.
      • This father also reported that he took his son ‘everywhere’ with him, not only to expose him to a variety of experiences, but also for him to walk for exercise.
      • While providing an environment in which students can work with top experts in specialized areas, the project also aims to expose them to other disciplines.
      • Their lack of knowledge and the context for much of the knowledge they are exposed to shapes their world.
      • When I was four or five years old, my parents decided they'd had enough of the city life and moved into a very rural area about 30 miles from Austin, exposing me to a completely new side of American culture.
      • They report great success with the store, since it offers a great way for the reading public to be exposed to comics - and maybe even buy some!
      • Clinicians can mentor students placed in the perioperative area and expose them to aspects of perioperative nursing that first interested these educators in this specialty.
      • This is a youth sports programme that provides all children with the opportunity to actively participate in physical education by exposing them to skills and knowledge of individual sports.
      • Each day had something new for the children, exposing them to various knowledge inputs.
      • ‘We lived in the Mount Baker area so she could be exposed to diverse socioeconomic communities,’ said her father.
      • Our mission is to introduce entrepreneurs to the art of effective networking and to expose them to resources that will assist them in attracting new markets.
      • This is important as it constantly exposes me to different types of knowledge and perspectives on life.
      • I learned this through the field experiences that exposed me to different cultures.
      • Many Americans were first exposed to Breillat's films through Romance, a critically touted but unpopular film.
      • The idea was to give a venue to its young members for getting stage experience as well as expose them to the world of film classics.
      • As an undergraduate, mathematics had been his preferred subject and he was exposed to political economy only in an introductory course taught by Hadley.
      • Having grown up and lived in a very multicultural area of London, I have been exposed to many forms of religion.
      • Apart from providing a platform for emerging artists, the festival aims to lure people into the inner city and expose them to the venues and positive developments in the area.
      Synonyms
      introduce
      bring into contact with, present with, make familiar/conversant/acquainted with, familiarize with, acquaint with, make aware of
    4. 1.4expose oneself Publicly and indecently display one's genitals.
      当众暴露自己的性器官,露阴
      police are hunting a man who exposed himself to a schoolgirl
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A whistling teenager who indecently exposed himself four times to young girls was today being hunted by police.
      • In each case the offender rode up on a mountain bike and sped off after committing an indecent assault or exposing himself.
      • When she turned round, the man indecently exposed himself.
      • The hotelier in the resort for six years was arrested on Thursday after indecently exposing himself to a plain clothes male officer.
      • The old Rastafarian who screams in the park was arrested for trying to steal a handbag and for exposing himself in a public place.
      • Which soap actor made a public apology for exposing himself on the Internet?
      • Police were today continuing to hunt two men who indecently exposed themselves to girls in Swindon.
      • A man was seen to be indecently exposing himself along a footpath.
      • A flasher has indecently exposed himself to two teenage girls in Broadway as they cycled near a disused railway bridge.
      • He also has allegations of exposing himself and urinating in public.
      • He was a twenty-something, strapping young lad, never having exposed himself publicly!
      • Three weeks earlier he exposed himself then indecently assaulted a 17-year-old girl walking in the same area just after 5pm on May 20.
      • A shuffling street drinker with a string of convictions over eight lost years, she is now notorious as the woman who exposes herself in public.
      • He was convicted twice in 1989 for indecently exposing himself to ten-year-old girls.
      • The court heard he had three previous convictions of outraging public decency after exposing himself in front of women in Manchester city centre.
      • Police are hunting for a sex pest who indecently exposed himself after trapping a 10-year-old girl in a St Annes phone box.
      • The man approached her and indecently exposed himself, before making a grab for her.
      • Apparently he was wanted for a series of offences ranging from indecently exposing himself to children to assaults on people who refused to give him money.
      • A motorist repeatedly blocked the path of a woman after indecently exposing himself to her as she waited for a bus on a busy Richmond road.
      • So, all incidents of females exposing themselves in public, where pictures are taken which result in disciplinary action or loss of job, shall now be called examples of the Bosley-Cherry Disconnect.
      Synonyms
      informal flash
    5. 1.5 Leave (a child) in the open to die.
      弃(婴孩)于户外让其死去
  • 2Reveal the true, objectionable nature of (someone or something)

    揭穿(某人或某事物)的令人不快的真相;揭露;揭发

    he has been exposed as a liar and a traitor

    他是一个骗子和叛徒的真面目被揭穿了。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Companies which had flourished when no one examined them too closely were suddenly exposed as shams.
    • He was exposed as the worst sort of politician we have in this Parliament.
    • How on earth can he make light of being publicly exposed as a liar?
    • I fear that I'll betray my lack of formal film education and be exposed for the fraud that I am.
    • The answer is you point out that plagiarists will be exposed and shamed in public - and this is exactly what happened two decades ago with the VC.
    • The applicant, at trial, was effectively exposed as a sham.
    • I was exposed as a neat freak when I house-sat for my editor.
    • He was officially exposed as a spy by then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1979 and was stripped of his knighthood.
    • Yet he loves to expose those in the public eye, especially Tory politicians, for sleaze.
    • The newspaper lost face when one of its reporters was exposed as a plagiarist.
    • However in recent years this reputation has been exposed as a sham.
    • His intention to become ordained was thwarted when he was exposed as an agnostic and his religious scepticism caused suspicion in the university.
    • In the final analysis though, this film too, exposes the darker and more savage aspect of ‘civilized’ urban society.
    • He was exposed as a man who thinks so little of the ethics of high office that he lobbied on ministerial letterhead to get his son off a traffic offence.
    • He was exposed as a double agent in the mid 1980s and relocated in mainland Britain.
    • The big issue is, if she's exposed as a fraud before we get our house keys back, I don't want her to go in a tiff and get them duplicated and such.
    • But just before 1.15 pm on Wednesday, the Prime Minister was exposed as either a liar or an incompetent.
    • 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.
    • Suddenly he is exposed as just another coach.
    • The reporter was exposed as a fraud last year after complaints from staff and readers that some of his stories appeared to be copied from other newspapers.
    Synonyms
    uncover, reveal, show, display, exhibit, disclose, manifest, unveil, unmask
    discover, bring to light, bring into the open, make known, unearth, let out, divulge, make obvious
    denounce, condemn
    detect, find out, catch out, smoke out
    betray, give away
    informal spill the beans on, blow the whistle on, pull the plug on
    1. 2.1 Make (something embarrassing or damaging) public.
      暴露;揭示(令人难堪或损害人的事情)
      the situation exposed a conflict within the government

      这一情况似乎暴露了政府内部意见不一。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • On the day Laois were cruelly punished as a rampant Tyrone side tore them apart and cruelly exposed their frailties.
      • From now on, all such information will no longer be exposed to the public.
      • After their bowling inadequacies were exposed earlier in the series, Australia gambled this time by dropping a batsman.
      • The Stevens report has exposed what that means - the state organising and covering up the murder of innocent people.
      • An inclination to tyranny has seldom been so readily exposed by a public figure.
      • We have seen that similar roles of the press are developing there too as media expose corruption.
      • The truth is he did not, which further exposes his hypocrisy and irresponsibility.
      • But there are also other developmental and infrastructural stories that need to be exposed by the media.
      • Isn't there advantage in exposing the fissures within society itself?
      • Perhaps they are just too shy and tender to expose their sensitive and creative sides to the cruel world.
      • Real whistleblowers expose wrongdoing while it is going on.
      • The party chair race has exposed deep fissures within the Democratic Party.
      • The former chief executive is set to sue the club in a move that could see the turmoil surrounding his replacement's ruthless takeover exposed in open court.
      • 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.
      • 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.
      • Will the results of such an investigation even be exposed to public view?
      • The problems have largely been of confidence and that has often been exposed at the French Open, where she seems to suffer from the burden of home expectation and has a relatively poor record.
  • 3Subject (photographic film) to light when operating a camera.

    使(胶卷)曝光

    all over Europe, thousands of miles of film are exposed for holiday snaps
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Until the early 1900s, photographic films had to be exposed for some 10 seconds.
    • I mainly use the meter setting of 3200 at the camera to expose the film.
    • Some images are printed using the Lightjet, a digital enlarger that exposes photographic paper with red, green and blue lasers.
    • In the traditional darkroom, a photographer makes a print by projecting light through the original piece of film, which exposes the paper.
    • Her work makes excellent use of what looks like badly exposed outdated Polaroid film.

Derivatives

  • exposer

  • noun
    • A free and independent press should be the cornerstone of a democratic society; a fearless champion of truth and exposer of corruption and hypocrisy.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The networks apologized, the football league apologized and the singer, the exposer himself, issued the same lame apology that everyone gives when they know they have done wrong.
      • What about this man, that great exposer of things that go wrong in life?
      • They are using their police to intimidate an exposer of their corruption.
      • The group - never the most ruthless exposer of mediocrity and disquiet - was making them look like men who'd never put ash to leather before.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French exposer, from Latin exponere (see expound), but influenced by Latin expositus 'put or set out' and Old French poser 'to place'.

Rhymes

appose, arose, Bose, brose, chose, close, compose, diagnose, self-diagnose, doze, enclose, foreclose, froze, hose, impose, interpose, juxtapose, Montrose, noes, nose, oppose, plainclothes, pose, propose, prose, rose, suppose, those, transpose, underexpose, uprose

exposé2

noun ɛkˈspəʊzeɪɪkˈspəʊzeɪˌɛkspoʊˈzeɪ
  • A report in the media that reveals something discreditable.

    a shocking exposé of a medical cover-up
    Example sentencesExamples
    • For all its vaunted independence, the newspaper produced very few exposés and scoops, and it developed very little in the way of new talent.
    • The secret life of librarians is revealed in this shocking exposé.
    • Responding to early protests and a number of exposés regarding its treatment of workers, the shoe company adopted a code of conduct for itself and its manufacturers in 1992.
    • A series of financial scandals, newspaper exposés and internal feuds eventually sunk the Klan of the 1920s, despite its political power.
    • But while there have been major media exposés concerning European funding for left-wing, pro-peace organizations, we know very little about the sources of right-wing media funding.
    • The contents were largely ‘taboo’ subjects with many hitherto unknown exposés that named hundreds of local, provincial and national officials and up to a thousand peasants.
    • Just released in the US when I was there were two eye-popping exposés of the industry and its corrupting effect on medical science.
    • For several days recently, a self-proclaimed student of the college has been offering exposés of scandals among college students to the media.
    • This is a shocking exposé of the food industry that will make readers look seriously at the contents of their supermarket trolleys.
    • Media exposés like the BBC's The Secret Agent have helped to transform a ragbag party into the talking point of British politics.
    • Hersh's original piece was relatively tame, as scandalous exposés go.
    • The plant's move to China was denounced in lengthy magazine exposés from both the right and left.
    • This book is scandalous not because of shocking exposés, but rather because of its very publication.
    • One might think that exposés of this kind would lead the media to take a fresh look at some of the US-UK governments' earlier claims justifying war.
    • The details revealed in the Times exposé underscore the enormous dangers facing the working class.
    • He was consulted when various publications and the media in the West including the BBC decided to do exposés on these groups.
    • He was sentenced to four years jail on a charge of perverting the course of justice after years of exposés of his links with organised crime and senior police.
    • Not only do I hold a press card authorised by Scotland Yard, but I have carried out several undercover exposés in the past three years.
    • Yet one striking feature of the BBC exposé was how few racists the secret interviewer/agent provocateur managed to expose.
    • Their razor-sharp wit, travel essays, dysfunctional family exposés and cultural critiques are easy, intelligent reading.
    Synonyms
    revelation, disclosure, exposure, uncovering, divulgence
    report, feature, piece, column
    scandal
    informal scoop

Origin

Early 19th century: from French, 'shown, set out', past participle of exposer (see expose).

Rhymes

rosé

expose1

verbɪkˈspoʊzikˈspōz
[with object]
  • 1Make (something) visible, typically by uncovering it.

    使暴露;使显露

    at low tide the sands are exposed

    低潮时沙滩就会显露出来。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • 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.
    • The entire section was stripped naked, exposing the ship's innards to the cold expanse of space.
    • For example, the Martian polar caps exhibit extensive layers that have been exposed by subsequent erosion.
    • Basil frowned, but before he could do anything, Sam reached out and ripped the towel off his shoulders, exposing the dark scars on the pale skin.
    • He pressed a button and a door hissed open, exposing a long dark corridor that hardly looked big enough for a grown-up to walk in.
    • Having completed the cut, the dealer exposes a card to determine who will be dealt the first card.
    • It consisted of a lavender shirt that draped off the shoulders, exposing them completely, and it was very low cut.
    • People are being warned not to enter the old camp at Killinthomas Wood outside Rathangan following an explosion during a fire at the site which exposed Asbestos.
    • 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.
    • I keep the ripped side up so that I can remember which side was exposed to the blown sand all day, reminding me to flip it over at night before I lay down to sleep.
    • If your cut exposes the hollow portion of the door, you must reinstall the solid-wood rail from the cutoff.
    • He was a little taller, and had the regulation hair cut, exposing largish ears.
    • The low quality fish they dry on sand, exposing it to birds and animals, may not bring them good revenue.
    • The circle was only exposed at low tide, for two to five hours.
    • My midriff fully exposed as well as the back of my sports bra.
    • He was wearing different clothing now, ripped denim shorts and a cut up shirt exposing his stomach, and his hair was down now and flowed past his shoulder blades.
    • 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.
    • Following winter storms, cobbles and rocky platforms are exposed, and the sand beach may only partially recover during the low waves of summer.
    • An open fracture is one in which the skin over the broken bone is cut, thus exposing the bone pieces to the elements.
    • The membrane was exposed for autoradiography and then probed with anti-HA.
    Synonyms
    reveal, uncover, lay bare, bare, leave unprotected
    1. 1.1often as adjective exposed Leave (something) uncovered or unprotected, especially from the weather.
      使无遮蔽(或保护)
      the coast is very exposed to the southwest

      海岸的西南面毫无遮挡。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • A second category of landforms includes those that relate to the intense cryogenic weathering of exposed bedrock.
      • There was something about this exposed, windswept piece of tarmac and turf which touched his soul.
      • The gusting wind muddied the open water of the exposed lake, and no activity was visible.
      • Expect schizophrenic weather in this exposed, wind-wracked landscape.
      • For the first time the civilian population throughout Britain and not just those in exposed coastal locations were vulnerable to attack.
      • Fully exposed to the elements, this crumbling edifice was his training grounds.
      • The three-acre garden was created from an exposed open field now sheltered by hedges and fences.
      • It was also late September, winter only weeks away and the nights bitterly cold with snow falling on the barren and exposed mountain pass, over which now we would have to cross.
      • It is the programmer's responsibility to ensure that no wires are left exposed so that no damage can occur from the users of the structure.
      • What type of primer would you recommend based on mostly bare exposed wood?
      • Water causes decay or rot of the wood and early failure of paint, and it accelerates the weathering of wood exposed outdoors.
      • Complete oxeas and styles are rare but do occur scattered as weathered elements on exposed etched surfaces.
      • But before Chase could even respond, he suddenly felt the hot sharp steel of a weapon dabbing the base of his exposed and unprotected neck.
      • The corals are inseparable from the matrix of the rocks and generally badly weathered on the exposed surfaces.
      • Treated seed exposed on soil surfaces will be hazardous to birds and other wildlife.
      Synonyms
      unprotected, open, wide open, without protection, without shelter, unsheltered, open to the elements, open to the weather
    2. 1.2 Subject (photographic film) to light, especially when operating a camera.
      使(胶卷)曝光
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In the traditional darkroom, a photographer makes a print by projecting light through the original piece of film, which exposes the paper.
      • Some images are printed using the Lightjet, a digital enlarger that exposes photographic paper with red, green and blue lasers.
      • Her work makes excellent use of what looks like badly exposed outdated Polaroid film.
      • Until the early 1900s, photographic films had to be exposed for some 10 seconds.
      • I mainly use the meter setting of 3200 at the camera to expose the film.
    3. 1.3expose oneself Publicly and indecently display one's genitals.
      当众暴露自己的性器官,露阴
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A flasher has indecently exposed himself to two teenage girls in Broadway as they cycled near a disused railway bridge.
      • He was a twenty-something, strapping young lad, never having exposed himself publicly!
      • When she turned round, the man indecently exposed himself.
      • So, all incidents of females exposing themselves in public, where pictures are taken which result in disciplinary action or loss of job, shall now be called examples of the Bosley-Cherry Disconnect.
      • Police are hunting for a sex pest who indecently exposed himself after trapping a 10-year-old girl in a St Annes phone box.
      • The old Rastafarian who screams in the park was arrested for trying to steal a handbag and for exposing himself in a public place.
      • A man was seen to be indecently exposing himself along a footpath.
      • A motorist repeatedly blocked the path of a woman after indecently exposing himself to her as she waited for a bus on a busy Richmond road.
      • He was convicted twice in 1989 for indecently exposing himself to ten-year-old girls.
      • The man approached her and indecently exposed himself, before making a grab for her.
      • In each case the offender rode up on a mountain bike and sped off after committing an indecent assault or exposing himself.
      • The court heard he had three previous convictions of outraging public decency after exposing himself in front of women in Manchester city centre.
      • Police were today continuing to hunt two men who indecently exposed themselves to girls in Swindon.
      • The hotelier in the resort for six years was arrested on Thursday after indecently exposing himself to a plain clothes male officer.
      • He also has allegations of exposing himself and urinating in public.
      • Three weeks earlier he exposed himself then indecently assaulted a 17-year-old girl walking in the same area just after 5pm on May 20.
      • Which soap actor made a public apology for exposing himself on the Internet?
      • A shuffling street drinker with a string of convictions over eight lost years, she is now notorious as the woman who exposes herself in public.
      • A whistling teenager who indecently exposed himself four times to young girls was today being hunted by police.
      • Apparently he was wanted for a series of offences ranging from indecently exposing himself to children to assaults on people who refused to give him money.
      Synonyms
      flash
    4. 1.4usually as adjective exposed Leave or put (someone) in an unprotected and vulnerable state.
      使(某人)处于无保护和易受伤害的状态
      Miranda felt exposed and lonely

      米兰达不仅没有安全感,而且感到很孤独。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • The plain was as flat as a tabletop, and she instinctively felt exposed and vulnerable, there being no possible way to conceal one's presence.
      • This attitude, at once exposed and cautious, open and liberated, characterizes her prose.
      • Although most of us are not begging on the street with an open hand, are we not all pleading with an exposed and vulnerable heart to be received?
      • Never sit in front of or with your back to a door or window, which leaves you exposed and vulnerable.
      • The wide open grass seemed strange, and they felt exposed and vulnerable after the comfortable shelter of the friendly forest.
      • When dawn came, I saw that my hiding place was no good - I was as exposed as a newborn baby.
      • They do the job because they want to help patients and make a difference to people, often when they are at their most exposed and vulnerable.
      • I had read her secret diary; she should have been feeling exposed and vulnerable at least a little bit, right?
      • And he'll be riding thousands of miles, exposed on the open roads of their country!
      • She wanted to protest, feeling more defenceless and exposed than ever with her back to any possible threat.
      • The earth lay open and exposed, its surface turned back like flaps of skin on a human chest, ready for surgery.
      • To leave them thus open and exposed is to place temptation in the way of would - be looters and smugglers.
    5. 1.5expose someone to Cause someone to experience or be at risk of.
      使某人遭受;使某人冒…的险
      he exposed himself unnecessarily to gunfire in the war
      Example sentencesExamples
      • From a personal safety point of view (14 members of the party were shot dead) it was foolhardy to expose yourself to risk by publicly stating your politics.
      • The study comprised 1260 individuals of various professions who were identified as occupationally exposed to ionizing radiation.
      • It is the sheer meaninglessness of the chaotic instability of our experiences which exposes us to despair.
      • Non-smokers exposed over an extended period of time to passive smoking also have an increased risk of lung cancer.
      • Further studies are planned in which workers occupationally exposed to chemicals will be evaluated.
      • Surely the top chefs are not seriously advocating that members of the public expose themselves to the risk of Hepatitis A by consuming raw oysters?
      • They argue that everyone has the right to go to a public place without being exposed to harm.
      • What can be done to ensure that we are not exposed to unnecessary risks from electromagnetic radiation?
      • The Australian Consumers' Association says the public is being exposed to more and more bait advertising, particularly with online buying.
      • Because her partner's immune system had been weakened by his condition, she was concerned he would be vulnerable if exposed to the disease.
      • He was regularly exposed to asbestos in the course of his employments as a boilermaker.
      • At work we are exposed to noise all day.
      • Hegarty assumes that our intention in travelling along a street is not merely to get somewhere, but to expose ourselves to a continuous display of messages encouraging us to buy things.
      • A French team of experts also showed that blood-brain barrier leakage was increased in rats exposed to mobile phone radiation.
      • Youngsters who are regularly exposed to tobacco smoke are twice as likely to develop asthma and chest infections.
      • Hospitality workers are particularly vulnerable because they are exposed to high levels of second-hand smoke on a daily basis.
      • Moreover, 5-10% of patients who are successfully treated experience coronary reocclusion, exposing them to the hazards of reinfarction.
      • The impact smashed open the capsule exposing its precious scientific cargo to contamination.
      • Why take clients down a path of experimentation that exposes them to unnecessary risk and continued expensive maintenance?
      • Most therapists readily recognize that children are at risk if they are exposed to political violence themselves.
      Synonyms
      make vulnerable, make subject, subject, lay open
    6. 1.6 Make (something embarrassing or damaging) public.
      暴露;揭示(令人难堪或损害人的事情)
      investigations exposed a vast network of illegalities
      Example sentencesExamples
      • On the day Laois were cruelly punished as a rampant Tyrone side tore them apart and cruelly exposed their frailties.
      • We have seen that similar roles of the press are developing there too as media expose corruption.
      • The Stevens report has exposed what that means - the state organising and covering up the murder of innocent people.
      • 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.
      • Isn't there advantage in exposing the fissures within society itself?
      • From now on, all such information will no longer be exposed to the public.
      • Real whistleblowers expose wrongdoing while it is going on.
      • The former chief executive is set to sue the club in a move that could see the turmoil surrounding his replacement's ruthless takeover exposed in open court.
      • After their bowling inadequacies were exposed earlier in the series, Australia gambled this time by dropping a batsman.
      • Will the results of such an investigation even be exposed to public view?
      • But there are also other developmental and infrastructural stories that need to be exposed by the media.
      • An inclination to tyranny has seldom been so readily exposed by a public figure.
      • The party chair race has exposed deep fissures within the Democratic Party.
      • The truth is he did not, which further exposes his hypocrisy and irresponsibility.
      • Perhaps they are just too shy and tender to expose their sensitive and creative sides to the cruel world.
      • The problems have largely been of confidence and that has often been exposed at the French Open, where she seems to suffer from the burden of home expectation and has a relatively poor record.
      • 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.
    7. 1.7 Reveal the true and typically objectionable nature of (someone or something)
      揭穿(某人或某事物)的令人不快的真相;揭露;揭发
      he has been exposed as a liar and a traitor

      他是一个骗子和叛徒的真面目被揭穿了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • He was officially exposed as a spy by then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1979 and was stripped of his knighthood.
      • The reporter was exposed as a fraud last year after complaints from staff and readers that some of his stories appeared to be copied from other newspapers.
      • Suddenly he is exposed as just another coach.
      • Yet he loves to expose those in the public eye, especially Tory politicians, for sleaze.
      • 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.
      • But just before 1.15 pm on Wednesday, the Prime Minister was exposed as either a liar or an incompetent.
      • The newspaper lost face when one of its reporters was exposed as a plagiarist.
      • In the final analysis though, this film too, exposes the darker and more savage aspect of ‘civilized’ urban society.
      • The applicant, at trial, was effectively exposed as a sham.
      • However in recent years this reputation has been exposed as a sham.
      • How on earth can he make light of being publicly exposed as a liar?
      • I fear that I'll betray my lack of formal film education and be exposed for the fraud that I am.
      • He was exposed as the worst sort of politician we have in this Parliament.
      • I was exposed as a neat freak when I house-sat for my editor.
      • Companies which had flourished when no one examined them too closely were suddenly exposed as shams.
      • The answer is you point out that plagiarists will be exposed and shamed in public - and this is exactly what happened two decades ago with the VC.
      • The big issue is, if she's exposed as a fraud before we get our house keys back, I don't want her to go in a tiff and get them duplicated and such.
      • He was exposed as a man who thinks so little of the ethics of high office that he lobbied on ministerial letterhead to get his son off a traffic offence.
      • His intention to become ordained was thwarted when he was exposed as an agnostic and his religious scepticism caused suspicion in the university.
      • He was exposed as a double agent in the mid 1980s and relocated in mainland Britain.
      Synonyms
      uncover, reveal, show, display, exhibit, disclose, manifest, unveil, unmask
    8. 1.8expose someone to Introduce someone to (a subject or area of knowledge)
      students were exposed to probability and statistics in high school
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Our mission is to introduce entrepreneurs to the art of effective networking and to expose them to resources that will assist them in attracting new markets.
      • Apart from providing a platform for emerging artists, the festival aims to lure people into the inner city and expose them to the venues and positive developments in the area.
      • During our quest for knowledge, we are exposed to a variety of research studies based on different research designs.
      • Each day had something new for the children, exposing them to various knowledge inputs.
      • It brings a challenge but it exposes you to different business areas.
      • This is important as it constantly exposes me to different types of knowledge and perspectives on life.
      • This is a youth sports programme that provides all children with the opportunity to actively participate in physical education by exposing them to skills and knowledge of individual sports.
      • I learned this through the field experiences that exposed me to different cultures.
      • Their lack of knowledge and the context for much of the knowledge they are exposed to shapes their world.
      • The idea was to give a venue to its young members for getting stage experience as well as expose them to the world of film classics.
      • Having grown up and lived in a very multicultural area of London, I have been exposed to many forms of religion.
      • They report great success with the store, since it offers a great way for the reading public to be exposed to comics - and maybe even buy some!
      • The children would add information to the projects as they were exposed to new knowledge.
      • ‘We lived in the Mount Baker area so she could be exposed to diverse socioeconomic communities,’ said her father.
      • While providing an environment in which students can work with top experts in specialized areas, the project also aims to expose them to other disciplines.
      • Many Americans were first exposed to Breillat's films through Romance, a critically touted but unpopular film.
      • As an undergraduate, mathematics had been his preferred subject and he was exposed to political economy only in an introductory course taught by Hadley.
      • This father also reported that he took his son ‘everywhere’ with him, not only to expose him to a variety of experiences, but also for him to walk for exercise.
      • Clinicians can mentor students placed in the perioperative area and expose them to aspects of perioperative nursing that first interested these educators in this specialty.
      • When I was four or five years old, my parents decided they'd had enough of the city life and moved into a very rural area about 30 miles from Austin, exposing me to a completely new side of American culture.
      Synonyms
      introduce
    9. 1.9 Leave (a child) in the open to die.
      弃(婴孩)于户外让其死去

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French exposer, from Latin exponere (see expound), but influenced by Latin expositus ‘put or set out’ and Old French poser ‘to place’.

exposé2

nounˌɛkspoʊˈzeɪˌekspōˈzā
  • A report of the facts about something, especially a journalistic report that reveals something scandalous.

    a shocking exposé of a medical cover-up
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The plant's move to China was denounced in lengthy magazine exposés from both the right and left.
    • Media exposés like the BBC's The Secret Agent have helped to transform a ragbag party into the talking point of British politics.
    • But while there have been major media exposés concerning European funding for left-wing, pro-peace organizations, we know very little about the sources of right-wing media funding.
    • One might think that exposés of this kind would lead the media to take a fresh look at some of the US-UK governments' earlier claims justifying war.
    • For all its vaunted independence, the newspaper produced very few exposés and scoops, and it developed very little in the way of new talent.
    • The secret life of librarians is revealed in this shocking exposé.
    • He was sentenced to four years jail on a charge of perverting the course of justice after years of exposés of his links with organised crime and senior police.
    • For several days recently, a self-proclaimed student of the college has been offering exposés of scandals among college students to the media.
    • Just released in the US when I was there were two eye-popping exposés of the industry and its corrupting effect on medical science.
    • Responding to early protests and a number of exposés regarding its treatment of workers, the shoe company adopted a code of conduct for itself and its manufacturers in 1992.
    • The details revealed in the Times exposé underscore the enormous dangers facing the working class.
    • This book is scandalous not because of shocking exposés, but rather because of its very publication.
    • Not only do I hold a press card authorised by Scotland Yard, but I have carried out several undercover exposés in the past three years.
    • This is a shocking exposé of the food industry that will make readers look seriously at the contents of their supermarket trolleys.
    • The contents were largely ‘taboo’ subjects with many hitherto unknown exposés that named hundreds of local, provincial and national officials and up to a thousand peasants.
    • He was consulted when various publications and the media in the West including the BBC decided to do exposés on these groups.
    • Their razor-sharp wit, travel essays, dysfunctional family exposés and cultural critiques are easy, intelligent reading.
    • Hersh's original piece was relatively tame, as scandalous exposés go.
    • Yet one striking feature of the BBC exposé was how few racists the secret interviewer/agent provocateur managed to expose.
    • A series of financial scandals, newspaper exposés and internal feuds eventually sunk the Klan of the 1920s, despite its political power.
    Synonyms
    revelation, disclosure, exposure, uncovering, divulgence

Origin

Early 19th century: from French, ‘shown, set out’, past participle of exposer (see expose).

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