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Definition of expound verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

expound

verb
 
/ɪkˈspaʊnd/
 
/ɪkˈspaʊnd/
[transitive, intransitive] (formal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they expound
 
/ɪkˈspaʊnd/
 
/ɪkˈspaʊnd/
he / she / it expounds
 
/ɪkˈspaʊndz/
 
/ɪkˈspaʊndz/
past simple expounded
 
/ɪkˈspaʊndɪd/
 
/ɪkˈspaʊndɪd/
past participle expounded
 
/ɪkˈspaʊndɪd/
 
/ɪkˈspaʊndɪd/
-ing form expounding
 
/ɪkˈspaʊndɪŋ/
 
/ɪkˈspaʊndɪŋ/
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  1. to explain something by talking about it in detail
    • expound something (to somebody) He expounded his views on the subject to me at great length.
    • the theory of language expounded by Chomsky
    • She expounded her theory further in the course of her talk.
    • These ideas were originally expounded by Plato.
    • expound on something We listened as she expounded on the government's new policies.
    Oxford Collocations DictionaryExpound is used with these nouns as the object:
    • doctrine
    • idea
    • view
    See full entry
    Word OriginMiddle English expoune (in the sense ‘explain (what is difficult)’): from Old French espon-, present tense stem of espondre, from Latin exponere ‘expose, publish, explain’, from ex- ‘out’ + ponere ‘put’. The origin of the final -d (recorded from the Middle English period) is uncertain (compare with compound, propound).
See expound in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
elaborate
adjective
 
 
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