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What is the noun for expose-68223?

What's the noun for expose-68223? Here's the word you're looking for.

exposure
  1. (uncountable) The condition of being exposed, uncovered, or unprotected.
  2. (countable, uncountable) That part which is facing or exposed to something, e.g. the sun, weather, sky, or a view.
  3. (uncountable) Lack of protection from weather or the elements.
  4. (photography) An instance of taking a photograph.
  5. (photography) The piece of film exposed to light.
  6. (photography) Details of the time and f-number used.
  7. (horticulture) The amount of sun, wind etc. experienced by a particular site.
  8. Synonyms:
  9. Examples:
    1. “The report is heavily redacted to prevent the exposure of classified information.”
      “The regular exposure of his bare skin to the stifling heat of the sun was of great concern to his doctor.”
      “The introduction of traffic exclusion zones can help reduce our children's exposure to pollution.”
exposition
  1. The action of exposing something to something, such as skin to the sunlight.
  2. The act of declaring or describing something through either speech or writing.
  3. (obsolete) The act of expulsion, or being expelled, from a place.
  4. (writing) An essay or speech in which any topic is discussed in detail.
  5. (writing) An opening section in fiction, including novel, play, and movie, by which background information about the characters, events, or setting is conveyed.
  6. (music) The opening section of a fugue; the opening section of a movement in sonata form
  7. Synonyms:
  8. Examples:
    1. “The International Technical Fair is the largest exposition held in Bulgaria.”
      “The way in which Antiochus appeals to human nature and its development in the exposition and defense of his ethics is modeled closely on Stoic theory, however.”
      “The very fact that Thomas wrote an exposition on Aristotle and not on Avicenna indicates that the former was more truly Thomas' master.”
exponent
  1. One who expounds, represents or advocates.
  2. (mathematics) The power to which a number, symbol or expression is to be raised, for example, the
    1. (mathematics) The result of a logarithm, between a base and an antilogarithm, for example, the
    2. (mathematics) The degree to which the root of a radicand is found, for example, the
  3. (linguistics) A manifestation of a morphosyntactic property.
  4. The part of a floating-point number that represents its exponent value.
  5. Synonyms:
  6. Examples:
    1. “He's certainly slim, and he's also an exponent of positive thinking, judging by the way he saw potential in the near-derelict chapel standing in Essex.”
      “Giorgio became the self-appointed exponent of the theory that ancient aliens built the great pyramids.”
      “Returning to aikido, the attitude that one's teacher is the supreme exponent of the art has many undesirable consequences.”
exponentiation
  1. (mathematics) The process of calculating a power by multiplying together a number of equal factors, where the exponent specifies the number of factors to multiply.
  2. (mathematics) A mathematical problem involving exponentiation.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “The following are a few examples showing that addition, multiplication, and exponentiation are primitive recursive.”
      “Imposing time reversibility has the computational advantage that the matrix exponentiation can be carried out without much difficulty.”
      “Computing individual hexadecimal digits using that formula relies on a venerable technique known as the binary algorithm for exponentiation.”
expo
  1. An exposition.
  2. An expediter; a restaurant worker who prepares food to be taken to tables.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “This expo is an ideal place to choose guides and handbooks for competitive examinations.”
      “The expo will feature classic, vintage, sports, touring and cruiser bikes, as well as a number of superbikes.”
      “The three-day expo inaugurated on Monday, is different in more ways than one.”
exponentiality
  1. (uncountable) The condition of being exponential.
  2. (countable) The degree to which something is exponential.
exposome
  1. A measure of the effects of life-long environmental exposures on health.
exponential
  1. (mathematics) Any function that has an exponent as an independent variable.
exposeome
  1. The totality of things that a person is exposed to in the environment.
exposition
  1. The action of putting something out to public view; for example in a display or show.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The International Technical Fair is the largest exposition held in Bulgaria.”
      “The way in which Antiochus appeals to human nature and its development in the exposition and defense of his ethics is modeled closely on Stoic theory, however.”
      “The very fact that Thomas wrote an exposition on Aristotle and not on Avicenna indicates that the former was more truly Thomas' master.”
exponentiator
  1. (computing) Any device or circuit that carries out a exponentiation operation
expounder
  1. A person who expounds, explains
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “He's an unwitting folklorist, a collector and expounder of hipster philosophy, barroom trivia, and pseudoscience.”
      “By the mid-fifties, Greenberg's critical style was clearly different from that of Harold Rosenberg, his chief rival as an expounder of Abstract Expressionism.”
      “Playfair earned for himself a high reputation in at least three branches of pure science, not primarily as a discoverer but rather as an expounder of theories.”
exposedness
exposé
  1. Publication of investigative journalism.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “She wrote an exposé on the horror of asylums, which was handed out at her lectures and later reprinted in newspapers.”
      “The article would serve as an exposé on the squalid conditions in the neighborhood.”
expounding
exposer
  1. One who exposes.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Shakespearean scholars have pointed out the connection between the dramatist and the exposer of exorcism.”
      “They are using their police to intimidate an exposer of their corruption.”
      “What about this man, that great exposer of things that go wrong in life?”
exposal
  1. (archaic) exposure
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “One of the most attractive features of spying on the Internet is the minimal risk that the criminal is exposal to.”
      “The plates have been visually checked for blistering, rusting, cracking or chipping according to ISO Standard 4626 after 120 hours of exposal.”
      “After, German types land mine, which was realized by the Iranian passengers incidentally, a bomb exposal squad was dispatched to the area.”
exposture
  1. (obsolete) exposure
exponentiations
  1. plural of exponentiation
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Additionally, each entity has to compute 6 scalar multiplication and 8 exponentiations.”
exponentialities
  1. plural of exponentiality
exponentiators
  1. plural of exponentiator
exponentials
  1. plural of exponential
  2. Examples:
    1. “The fitting of a sum of exponentials convoluted to an instrument response to experimental data is traditionally done by iterative convolution.”
      “They drew up multiplication tables and tables of reciprocals, squares, cubes and exponentials, and used them to calculate compound interest and mortgage repayments.”
      “It allows execution of calculations with very long numbers, displaying them correctly without incomprehensible exponentials.”
expositions
  1. plural of exposition
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The importance of this survey lies in its synthetic descriptions and in its clear expositions on what needs to be further studied in this area.”
      “These reviews remain the most comprehensible expositions of the essential elements of regulation.”
      “There are other expositions of the theory of dialectics which present it in opposition to formal logic.”
expoundings
exposeomes
  1. plural of exposeome
expounders
  1. plural of expounder
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Its expounders view the market-led development strategy as a means of achieving prosperity.”
      “O'Gorman was one of the principal expounders of functionalist architecture in Mexico.”
      “It is enough to count him among the greatest of its expounders and demonstrators.”
exponents
  1. plural of exponent
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The most sophisticated exponents against encroachments of the central state were the English pluralists Figgis, Laski, and Cole.”
      “Based on the powers of Y and X, isometric exponents can be calculated and compared with the observed values.”
      “I have always had wonderful admiration for the sport and its great exponents.”
exposomes
  1. plural of exposome
exposures
  1. plural of exposure
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Present along the surface exposures of the anticline are rocks dating from Upper Cretaceous to Paleocene age.”
      “Such exposures resulted in decreased verbal attention, visual memory, motoricity, and affectivity.”
      “Within the indoor environment, the perceived odor will often result from exposures to a mixture of several odorants.”
exposers
exposals
expos
  1. plural of expo
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “There should be high profile Indonesian culture and trade expos at major cities in the west, shamelessly huckstering for this country.”
      “There are now plans to hold similar expos in several major towns and cities, in order to bring more revenue to artisans around the country, throughout the year.”
      “The world's fairs in turn inspired the expos of more recent decades, in which art is a readily visible entity understood as representing a country.”
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