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  1. Dictionary
    exhibit
    /ɪɡˈzɪbɪt/

    verb

    • 1. publicly display (a work of art or item of interest) in an art gallery or museum or at a trade fair: "only one sculpture was exhibited in the artist's lifetime"
    • 2. manifest clearly (a quality or a type of behaviour): "he could exhibit a saintlike submissiveness" Similar showrevealdisplaymanifestOpposite concealhide

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. a collection of objects that is shown to the public in a museum, etc.: Let's go see the new dinosaur exhibit. law specialized. a thing used as evidence (= proof that something is true) in a trial: Is exhibit C the weapon that you say was used? SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  3. The meaning of EXHIBIT is to submit (something, such as a document) to a court or officer in course of proceedings; also : to present or offer officially or in legal form. How to use exhibit in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Exhibit.

  4. a collection of objects that is shown to the public in a museum, etc.: Let's go see the new dinosaur exhibit. law specialized. a thing used as evidence (= proof that something is true) in a trial: Is exhibit C the weapon that you say was used? SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  5. Exhibit definition: to offer or expose to view; present for inspection. See examples of EXHIBIT used in a sentence.

  6. An exhibit is a painting, sculpture, or object of interest that is displayed to the public in a museum or art gallery.

  7. An exhibit is an item that is shown off for the public, such as a painting on display at a gallery or a historical document shown under glass at a museum. The main thing to remember about an exhibit is that it refers to something presented formally and in a public setting.

  8. [transitive] exhibit something (formal) to show clearly that you have or feel a particular quality, ability, feeling or symptom synonym display. The patient exhibited signs of fatigue and memory loss. The three novels exhibit a growing confidence in the author's use of language.