unfoldment


un·fold

U0072000 (ŭn-fōld′)v. un·fold·ed, un·fold·ing, un·folds v.tr.1. To open and spread out (something folded); extend.2. To remove the coverings from; disclose to view: unfold a package.3. To reveal gradually by written or spoken explanation; make known: "He unfolded his tale of woe: the descriptions of poverty and the great distance they had traveled, the abuses they had suffered, the injustice of it all" (Robert Rosenberg).v.intr.1. a. To become spread out; open out: Spring flowers unfolded everywhere.b. To develop or occur as a series of events or stages: "The trial unfolded in an imposing, high-ceilinged courtroom in Westminster Hall" (Adam Hochschild).2. To be revealed gradually to the understanding: A solution to the problem unfolded as they spoke.
un·fold′ment n.

unfoldment

(ʌnˈfəʊldmənt) nthe process of unfolding