usher in
Upper Intermediate (B2) formal
Officially bring in or start something important, or guide someone into a room.
"A member of staff ushered the guests in and directed them to their seats."
Hear it in context
Selfie Waves
Vsauce · 8:43
photography she didn't usher in a
New Discoveries on Wormholes Are Changing Everything
Cool Worlds · 26:05
usher in a new era for humanity.
Prof. Tim Winter - ITC Video Keynote: “Klossowski's reading of Nietzsche from an Islamic viewpoint”
St Andrews Encyclopaedia of Theology · 41:17
warns will usher in an Islamic Barbarian
This is Financial Advice
Folding Ideas · 28:53
it will usher in a golden age of
How to Defeat the Financial Industrial Complex — Simon Dixon on Tim Tompkins & Rex Jones
Simon Dixon · 42:44
nationalism and we can usher in the surveillance