搜尋結果
usher
- IPA[ˈəSHər]
美式
- a person who shows people to their seats, especially in a theater or at a wedding.;an official in a court whose duties include swearing in jurors and witnesses and keeping order.
- show or guide (someone) somewhere;cause or mark the start of something new
verb: usher, 3rd person present: ushers, gerund or present participle: ushering, past tense: ushered, past participle: ushered
noun: usher, plural noun: ushers
- 釋義
- 相關詞
名詞
- 1. a person who shows people to their seats, especially in a theater or at a wedding.
- ▪ an official in a court whose duties include swearing in jurors and witnesses and keeping order.
- ▪ British a person employed to walk before a person of high rank on special occasions.
- 2. archaic an assistant teacher.
動詞
- 1. show or guide (someone) somewhere a waiter ushered me to a table
- 2. cause or mark the start of something new the railroads ushered in an era of cheap mass travel
- an inherited condition characterized by impairment of vision and hearing, resulting from the ...
Oxford Dictionary
- (especially in African American Baptist churches) a body of attendants who are responsible for ... she served in the choir and on the church's usher board
Oxford Dictionary
- (especially in African American Baptist churches) a body of attendants who are responsible for ... she served in the choir and on the church's usher board
Oxford American Dictionary
- an inherited condition characterized by impairment of vision and hearing, resulting from the ...
Oxford American Dictionary
- (in the UK) the deputy of Black Rod.
Oxford Dictionary
- 更多解釋
- IPA[ˈʌʃə]
英式
- a person who shows people to their seats, especially in a cinema or theatre or at a wedding.
- show or guide (someone) somewhere: a waiter ushered me to a table
Oxford Dictionary