(poses, posing, posed)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
If something poses a problem or a danger, it is the cause of that problem or danger.
This could pose a threat to jobs in the coal industry...
His ill health poses serious problems for the future.
VERB: V n, V n
2.
If you pose a question, you ask it. If you pose an issue that needs considering, you mention the issue. (FORMAL)
When I finally posed the question, 'Why?' he merely shrugged.
...the moral issues posed by new technologies.
VERB: V n, V-ed
3.
If you pose as someone, you pretend to be that person in order to deceive people.
The team posed as drug dealers to trap the ringleaders.
VERB: V as n
4.
If you pose for a photograph or painting, you stay in a particular position so that someone can photograph you or paint you.
Before going into their meeting the six foreign ministers posed for photographs.
VERB: V for n
5.
You can say that people are posing when you think that they are behaving in an insincere or exaggerated way because they want to make a particular impression on other people.
He criticized them for dressing outrageously and posing pretentiously.
VERB: usu cont, V [disapproval]
6.
A pose is a particular way that you stand, sit, or lie, for example when you are being photographed or painted.
We have had several preliminary sittings in various poses.
N-COUNT