1. usher
The prosecutor nodded to the usher, who opened the door (The Redbreast)
You know it won't be an ordinary dinner when you're ushered into a fermentation vat on the way to your table.
usher (n), usherette
The first run of experiments began with students being ushered – alone, without phones, books or anything to write with
Instagram is ushering in the latest development.
She ushered them into a room at the front of the house
The concert was about to start, so the staff ushered us hastily to our seats.
As the proposals relate to taxation, it should require unanimity at Council level, yet the legislation is being ushered in via the transport provision of Lisbon.
A retired ballplayer, age fifty-five and dressed in golf attire (sneakers, khakis, cap), approaches the lower tier of seats at Citi Field and is rebuffed by an usher.