词汇 | exposing |
释义 | exposing present participle ofexpose expose verb[ T ] uk /ɪkˈspəʊz/ us /ɪkˈspoʊz/ exposeverb[T] (UNCOVER)to remove what is covering something so that it can be seen: 暴露;露出;使曝光 The plaster on the walls has been removed to expose the original bricks underneath.墙上的灰泥已被除去,露出了里面原本的墙砖。 He damaged his leg so badly in the accident that the bone was exposed.车祸中他腿受了重伤,骨头都露了出来。 to allow light to shine on photographic film, as part of producing an image or in a way that destroys an image: Depending on how bright the sky is and what kind of effect you want to achieve, you might expose the film anywhere from one minute to 10 minutes. under-exposedThis photograph was under-exposed (= too little light was allowed to reach the film). over-exposedMany of the show's paintings give the impression of over-exposed photographs (= in which too much light was allowed to reach the film). Police forced tourists who had photographed the incident to expose their film. Related words overexpose underexpose unexposed expose yourself If a man exposes himself, he shows his sexual organs in a public place to people he does not know.(男性由于病态心理在公共场合)裸露性器官,露阴 We decided to expose the wooden beams in the sitting room to give it a more old-fashioned feel. More political scandals were exposed in the newspapers today. He had undone the buttons of his shirt, exposing an unsightly expanse of white flesh.他解开衬衫纽扣,露出一片白花花的肉,很不雅观。 The movie is about a young police officer and his struggle to expose corruption in the force. Embarrassing details of their private life were exposed to the public. Showing and demonstrating act out attest bespeak breastbeating bring indicate mark something out masterclass ostensive ostensively outlet point (something/someone) out reflect reveal trace unproved unproven unveil unwrap vent You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics: Photography exposeverb[T] (PUT AT RISK)B2 to put someone at risk from something harmful or unpleasant: It is feared that people living near the power station may have been exposed to radiation. expose someone to somethingHis comments in the interview could expose him to charges of perjury. There had been an outbreak of the virus and healthcare workers had been exposed. About 800,000 children are exposed to poisons each year. He was reluctant to take commercial flights because of the fear of exposing himself to germs. Storing or distributing unlawful material could expose you to criminal liability. Taking risks adventurer all in be skating on thin iceidiom bet the farm/ranchidiom broke dare expose hazard high wire high-stakes imperil jeopardize lay re-expose risk run the risk of doing somethingidiom sail sail close to the windidiom skate sniper's alley exposeverb[T] (MAKE PUBLIC)B2 to make public something bad or dishonest: 揭露,揭发,揭穿坏事(或不诚实之事) expose corruptionThe review exposed widespread corruption in the police force.这篇评论文章揭露了警察部队盛行的腐败现象。 expose someone as somethingThe newspaper story exposed him as (= showed that he was) a liar.报纸上的这篇报道揭发他是个骗子。 Revealing secrets & becoming known anti-secrecy backchannel bare bare your heart/soulidiom be the talk of somewhereidiom blow someone's coveridiom blow/take the lid off somethingidiom declassify divulge hold huddle kiss put the word outidiom rat rat on someone/something reintroduce revealingly state's evidence surface unravel Examples of exposingexposing In English, many past and present participles of verbs can be used as adjectives. Some of these examples may show the adjective use. An occluding window was placed around each scene, thus exposing an area and occluding the surrounding space. Attempting to come to terms with these rapid social changes, individuals increasingly withdrew into silence, fearful of exposing their true selves to strangers. In addition, the buildings offered no protective open-air courtyards, exposing children who wanted to play in the grass to automatic gunfire. The prospect almost certainly deterred those who shrank from so exposing their private life from seeking a public imprimatur for their personal marital failure. Effect of temperature and approach\\separation rates on binding and unbinding mechanisms of two adhering membranes exposing mobile ligand and receptor groups. The present experiment presumably provided a more learning-conducive context by exposing subjects to the target items three times prior to test. Indeed, exposing mixed culture biofilms grown at different nutrient conditions to a biocide showed significant differences in the biofilm-to-planktonic yield. Experiments exposing dry selenite crystals to cold, moisture-rich (frost-forming) conditions overnight show that moisture condenses around the microbial colonies. This research explores some of these issues by exposing and explaining how a group of community nurses perceive and practise delegation. An ultraviolet laser "paints" the object as a series of horizontal layers, exposing the liquid in the tank and hardening it. At present this identifies our base skeletons using pattern matching: we would like to implement more sophisticated transformations for exposing and optimizing parallelism. Researchers can help by exposing the detailed, practical barriers to positive change. Meanwhile, seaside humour now appears to lie more in exposing the realities beneath the old archetypes. After completing the left panel of the score, the panels are folded open exposing the inner section of the music. Diaspores are gravity dispersed and the seed coat rapidly decays, exposing cotyledons to the immediate environment prior to germination. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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