revealing
English
Etymology
From Middle English reveling; equivalent to reveal + -ing.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ɹɪˈviːlɪŋ/, /ɹəˈviːlɪŋ/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ɹɪˈvilɪŋ/, /ɹəˈvilɪŋ/
Audio (US): (file) - Rhymes: -iːlɪŋ
- Hyphenation: re‧veal‧ing
Adjective
revealing (comparative more revealing, superlative most revealing)
- Informative.
- 2019 July 24, David Austin Walsh, “Flirting With Fascism”, in Jewish Currents[1]:
- Lest anyone on the left think that Tucker [Carlson] and his friends are potential anti-capitalist allies, their specific objections to corporate capitalism are revealing. To them, the real issue is not labor exploitation, but rather the “corporate alliance with the progressive left.”
- a revealing analysis
- Of clothing: allowing more than is usual to be seen.
- Her shirt is rather revealing.
Derived terms
Translations
of clothing
|
Verb
revealing
- present participle and gerund of reveal
Noun
revealing (plural revealings)
- An act of revealing; the process of revealing; something revealed.
- Synonyms: revelation, disclosure, uncovering, unveiling; apocalypse
- Coordinate term: realization
- It became clear that we were witnessing a great revealing of secrets.
- 1836, William Tait, Mrs. Christian Isobel Johnstone, Tait's Edinburgh Magazine, volume 3, page 113:
- In these letters, and the remembered conversations, we have fuller revealings of the inner man, greater depth of discovery into that vast and labyrinthine mind […]
- 1852, Herman Melville, Pierre; or The Ambiguities:
- She paused a moment; while vaguely to his secret self Pierre revolved these strange revealings; but now he was all attention again as Isabel resumed.