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Definitions

expositor

[ik-spoz-i-ter] / ɪkˈspɒz ɪ tər /






Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

In a statement, Thomas F. Rosenbaum, the president of Caltech, called Dr. Stone “a great scientist, a formidable leader and a gifted expositor of discovery.”

From New York Times

John Mercer of Maryland, likewise, said that he “disapproved of the Doctrine that the Judges as expositors of the Constitution should have the authority to declare a law void.”

From New York Times

As a scholar and a jurist, Scalia was the chief expositor of the judicial philosophy known as originalism.

From The New Yorker

“A polymath, a discerner of Nature’s fundamental patterns, and, as such, an expositor for the connections of physics to other disciplines, Murray helped define the approaches of generations of scientists.”

From Washington Post

“Roger Stone and Jerome Corsi are, respectively, the progenitor and the expositor of the world view of the current President of the United States.”

From The New Yorker