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Discover LudwigThe word 'expounds' is correct and usable in written English
It typically means to explain something in detail, and can be used either with people (e.g. expound upon an idea) or with writing (e.g. expound a theory). Example sentence: The professor expounded upon her theory of collective consciousness for nearly an hour.
Exact(60)
Back in his office in Strabane, one of Northern Ireland's worst unemployment blackspots, Doherty, 55, chair of the Stormont economic committee and based in West Tyrone for five years, expounds his plans to bring jobs and infrastructure to a neglected region.
Huntsman then eloquently and fluently expounds on America's economic woes and the "trust deficit" of its broken political system and vows to fix it.
Mr Abad's finely crafted novel not only expounds its narrators' contrasting attitudes towards sex, rural life and tradition in a modernising country, but also tells in fictional form the true story of an attempt to create a rural middle class in Colombia.
Then he expounds what he believes is the right way: an imprecise mix of personal reflection and the sharing of experience.Mr Mintzberg finds fault with the emphasis that many MBA programmes place on frenetic case studies which encourage students to come up with rapid answers based on meagre data.
These ideas are not necessarily new, but she expounds them with great passion and panache.How much longer will Greece's old families continue to enjoy this sort of name recognition, which newcomers have no hope of emulating?
The result would be a less socially divisive education system.Yugo Kovach Twickenham, MiddlesexSIR —Your leader on school selection adeptly expounds the theory of competition and choice in education, but then fails to put it into practice.
Sir Frank expounds on the importance of music in Forster's work, including the use of literary leitmotifs that run through his novels like musical themes.
How, in Mesopotamia, for instance, to get agreement on this, or anything else, from northern Kurds, southern merchants and various tribes, none of whom particularly wanted to be part of an Arab state called Iraq?The snag in those days, as Timothy Paris expounds, was not protest in the "liberated" lands, but the internecine quarrels of the British government.
She insists that Jesus of Nazareth made no claim to be divine: a famous New Testament passage that expounds both his self-abasement and divine glory does not mean what Christians think it means, she adds.Ms Armstrong has won admiration from Muslims and Jews for expounding their traditions in ways that earn respect from outsiders.
In another book, Mustaqbal al-thaqāfah fī Miṣr (1938; The Future of Culture in Egypt), he expounds his belief that Egypt belongs by heritage to the same wider Mediterranean civilization that embraces Greece, Italy, and France; it advocates the assimilation of modern European culture.
A final question concerns the form proper to artistic and literary history, which, in the form that arose in the romantic period, and still prevails to-day, expounds the history of works of art as a function of the concepts and social needs of its various periods, regarding them as aesthetic expressions of these things and connecting them closely with civil history.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com