[
US
/ˈɛkspoʊ/
]
[ UK /ˈɛkspəʊ/ ]
[ UK /ˈɛkspəʊ/ ]
NOUN
- a collection of things (goods or works of art etc.) for public display
How To Use expo In A Sentence
- Naturally, this makes interpersonal relations, especially with societies unexposed to the advantages of the American lifestyle, a little difficult.
- The huge fall in exports has done a great deal of harm to the economy.
- After a long, tedious sail, during which I was subjected to every discomfort, and exposure to the weather, as well as jeers and insults that effervesced from a corrupt heart, where they had been concealed for so many years, we reached a spot near enough to the land to discover a cluster of orange trees and a cabin. Bond and Free: A Tale of the South
- Receiving the round initial in the third quarter, the Rams would put together the 10-play, 61-yard expostulate immoderate 5 mins as great as finishing it off with the 6-yard TD pass from Stefkovich to So, TE, Joe Migliarese (Blue Bell, Pa.) to tighten the measure to twenty-nine twenty-eight TU. Archive 2009-12-01
- Such aggregations not only promote transmission of micro-organisms but through repeated exposure allow large doses of these.
- This is exponential growth, constant doubling. The Crisis of Life on Earth - our legacy from the second millenium
- Moreover, don't these choices facilitate a feminist reading of the text, deconstructing sentimentality to expose masculine failings and feminine rebellion?
- These frank statements suggest that he is sincere and serious about exposing the problems and proposing solutions.
- This would include both goods that are transshipped without modification and goods that are exported after value-added processing. Ian Fletcher: Why a Flat Tariff on All U.S. Imports Would Work
- Ed would drill by hand and blast away the rock, exposing the pegmatite.