PROPOUND


Meaning of PROPOUND in English

prəˈpau̇nd, prōˈ- verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: alteration of earlier propoun, alteration (influenced by obsolete English compoun — var of English compound (I) — & obsolete English expoun — variant of English expound ) of propone, from Middle English (Scots) proponen, from Latin proponere to display, declare, propound, from pro before + ponere to put, place — more at for , position

transitive verb

1. : to offer for consideration, deliberation, or debate : put for solution : set forth

propound a doctrine

: propose

propound a question

propound a hypothesis

2. : to propose or name as a candidate (as for admission to communion with a church or for an office)

3. obsolete : to set before one's own mind or another's as an incentive, motive, aim, representation, or idea

darest thou to the Son of God propound to worship thee — John Milton

intransitive verb

: to make a proposal : put a question

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.