expansion
Americannoun
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the act or process of expanding.
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the state or quality of being expanded.
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the amount or degree of expanding.
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an expanded, dilated, or enlarged portion or form of a thing.
The present article is an expansion of one he wrote last year.
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anything spread out; expanse.
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Mathematics.
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the development at length of an expression indicated in a contracted form, as a 2 + 2 ab + b 2 for the expression (a +b ) 2 .
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any mathematical series that converges to a function for specified values in the domain of the function, as 1 + x + x 2 + … for 1/(1 −x ) when x < 1.
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Machinery. that part of the operation of an engine in which the volume of the working medium increases and its pressure decreases.
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an increase in economic and industrial activity (contraction ).
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additional content for a video game, card game, board game, etc., that significantly expands or alters the way the game is played.
I really improved my deck with cards from the latest expansion.
You can play the stand-alone expansion without ever buying the original game.
noun
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the act of expanding or the state of being expanded
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something expanded; an expanded surface or part
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the degree, extent, or amount by which something expands
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an increase, enlargement, or development, esp in the activities of a company
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maths
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the form of an expression or function when it is written as the sum or product of its terms
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the act or process of determining this expanded form
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the part of an engine cycle in which the working fluid does useful work by increasing in volume
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the increase in the dimensions of a body or substance when subjected to an increase in temperature, internal pressure, etc
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An increase in the volume of a substance while its mass remains the same. Expansion is usually due to heating. When substances are heated, the molecular bonds between their particles are weakened, and the particles move faster, causing the substance to expand.
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A number or other mathematical expression written in an extended form. For example, a 2 + 2 ab + b 2 is the expansion of (a + b) 2.
Other Word Forms
- antiexpansion adjective
- expansional adjective
- expansionary adjective
- nonexpansion noun
- overexpansion noun
- preexpansion noun
- reexpansion noun
- self-expansion noun
- superexpansion noun
Etymology
Origin of expansion
First recorded in 1605–15; from Late Latin expānsiōn-, stem of expānsiō; equivalent to expanse + -ion
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.
“This significant expansion of our compute infrastructure will power our frontier Claude models and help us serve extraordinary demand from customers worldwide,” Anthropic said in a blog post on Monday.
From Barron's • Apr. 7, 2026
The expansion will also include more space for staff and an extra room to store incoming donations.
From BBC • Apr. 7, 2026
Instead, national oil company QatarEnergy has lost 17% of its export capacity for as long as five years after airstrikes on its Ras Laffan LNG hub, and it has said expansion projects would be delayed.
From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 7, 2026
The FAA said United’s expansion will stress the Chicago airport’s runway, terminal and air-traffic control systems.
From MarketWatch • Apr. 6, 2026
It was, rather, a vast sudden expansion on a whopping scale.
From "A Short History of Nearly Everything" by Bill Bryson
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
