0 to show someone where to go or sit -- wprowadzać/zaprowadzić kogoś gdzieś
She ushered me into her office.
1 someone who shows people where to sit in a theatre or at a formal event -- bileter/ka
Although these steps ushered in a dramatic, albeit limited, political opening, by 1997, many of these measures had been reversed.
We were ushered into a large, high-ceilinged room which had a table with drinks and chairs around the edges.
The guru whispers the mantra in the disciple's ear, and with that the disciple is ushered in as one of the group.
Finally, it ushered in a period of an increasing interlocking of economies on a world scale dominated by a capitalist centre.
The 1997 constitution, which became applicable in the 2001 general election, ushered in a more centralised party system.
The group learnt that the achievement of musical -uency went with 'feeling good' that ushered in quiescent states.
The interwar period ushered in a new period, dominated by a welfare/interventionist philosophy, that would transform monetary relations thereafter.
The 1920s had ushered in a period of installment purchases, where consumers borrowed money in order to buy goods.