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To ushers
noun
A person, in a church, cinema etc., who escorts people to their seats.
Exact(4)
Other expenses: payments to ushers, box-office personnel and security.
Bishop Jethro James, a chaplain for the New Jersey State Police and an adviser to the Department of Homeland Security, talked about security workshops available to ushers, greeters, and other church personnel, and recommended an active-shooter workshop they could take to prepare them for a situation like the one in Charleston.
Investigations by the Observer this weekend found that several larger London arts venues, such as the Barbican, offer younger staff a pound an hour less than the London Living Wage, while many smaller venues, such as the Tricycle Theatre in north London, pay almost £1.50 an hour less to ushers.
When he walked onto the convention stage on Wednesday to check out where he would be standing for his big moment, he made a widely grinning, grandly gesticulating show of pointing to ushers, waving to supporters and calling out familiar names, even as his straight-faced entourage busily went about checking the lighting and sound.
Similar(56)
Not to usher them in.' Damage control.
Lucas immediately flicked her email to Usher.
Prologue am I who come to usher in.
Police appeared, to usher them away from Ms Li.
Next to Usher, his mentor, Mr. Bieber just fades away.
Along came Barack Obama offering to usher in a new era.
Hello!" She beams, poised to usher me to the breadsticks.
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