Usher in a sentence as a noun

Maybe this change in culture could usher in a New Camelot.

I will now resist the urge to credit Apple for helping usher in such a shift in culture.

I asked an usher and he told me it was common practice to adapt to the gender mix of the audience.

But Sundar had concluded that it was an artifact of the style of computing that Google was about to usher out the door.

- to usher humanity into a new age of security and freedom.

Google can't wait to usher in a future where people stay in their rooms and eat Soylent while being entertained and exercised by their VR-enabled computers.

They don't have time to worry about your high-minded concepts of personal fulfillment, and whether or not a FAI will usher in a utopia of zero scarcity.

Usher in a sentence as a verb

The socialization of roads that took place during the Victorian era, along with the growth of the railroad industry, helped usher in the period of great economic and industrial expansion that lead to the Gilded Age.

I don't mean to come across as a cranky person who bemoans tablet use, I just feel the process is cumbersome not being able to have your hands free and wonder if people really think this is the form factor to usher in the "post-pc" era, whatever that is.

I hope that this fingerprint sensor, which undoubtedly will be incorporated into authentication for payment systems, doesn't usher in a future of reliance on a fundamentally untrustworthy device.

This era of hyper connectivity and ultra social awareness was supposed to usher in some sort of Utopian orgasm -- one in which MZ would be carried on the shoulders of the masses to stand next to fantastical human saviors like Jesus.

If I want a Thunderbolt display for my Macbook, I still end up with a power cord adapter that's over a year out of date.- And now Apple wants to convince us that somehow, someway, the forthcoming Mac Pro will somehow usher in a new wave of adoption?

I have a real fondness for everything Pixar is doing, one of the best storytellers I had the chance to know at film school now works there, but I think the trend of Pixarification of films is actually a threat to the kinds of film that will ultimately usher in a new era of Hollywood.

Usher definitions

noun

Irish prelate who deduced from the Bible that Creation occurred in the year 4004 BC (1581-1656)

See also: Ussher Usher

noun

an official stationed at the entrance of a courtroom or legislative chamber

See also: doorkeeper

noun

someone employed to conduct others

See also: guide

verb

take (someone) to their seats, as in theaters or auditoriums; "The usher showed us to our seats"

See also: show