0 past simple and past participle of air
1 to make opinions or complaints known to other people:
Putting a complaint in the suggestions box is one way of airing your grievances.
He'll air his views on the war whether people want to listen or not.
2 to become dry and/or fresh, or to cause to become dry and/or fresh:
3 to broadcast something or be broadcast on radio or television:
His pockets had to be emptied of doofers from time to time, and aired.
Where disagreements occurred amongst team members, these were aired at research and steering group meetings and were used to further direct the line of enquiry.
By devising simple, local mechanisms to get conflicts aired immediately the number of conflicts that reduce trust can be reduced.
With these philosophical concerns aired, we can turn to a more concrete assessment of the model itself.
Several highly-publicized cases which aired convents' disciplinary problems did little to foster public acceptance.
Only a minority, mainly from the left, aired its reservations in these ways.
By no means all the voices aired by advocates of planning were the voices of radical but democratic socialists.
The differences between the two institutions were aired publicly in the theatrical press.