Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

expose

verb transitive

[L. expositum, from expono; ex and pono, to place. The radical sense of pono is to set or place, or rather to throw or thrust down. To expose is to set or throw open, or to thrust forth.]

s as z.

expose

To lay open; to set to public view; to disclose; to uncover or draw from concealment; as, to expose the secret artifices of a court; to expose a plan or design.

expose

To make bare; to uncover; to remove from any thing that which guards or protects; as, to expose the head or the breast to the air.

expose

To remove from shelter; to place in a situation to be affected or acted on; as, to expose one’s self to violent heat.

expose

To lay open to attack, by any means; as, to expose an army or garrison.

expose

To make liable; to subject; as, to expose one’s self to pain, grief or toil; to expose one’s self to insult.

expose

To put in the power of; as, to expose one’s self to the seas.

expose

To lay open to censure, ridicule or contempt. A fool might once himself alone expose.

expose

To lay open, in almost any manner; as, to expose one’s self to examination or scrutiny.

expose

To put in danger. The good soldier never shrinks from exposing himself, when duty requires it.

expose

To cast out to chance; to place abroad, or in a situation unprotected. Some nations expose their children.

expose

To lay open; to make public. Be careful not unnecessarily to expose the faults of a neighbor.

expose

To offer; to place in a situation to invite purchasers; as, to expose goods to sale.

expose

To offer to inspection; as, to expose paintings in a gallery.