0 present participle of usher
1 to show someone where they should go, or to make someone go where you want them to go:
Recent advances in genetic and proteomic analyses have allowed the identification of tumour-specific targets for cancer therapy, ushering in the era of targeted therapeutics.
In the prologue, a formally dressed man looks nervously at the camera as his wife alights from their car, ushering out their two sons.
The youth saw themselves as ushering in a new world.
They anticipate its dissolution and aim to establish their own power, ushering in new institutions and symbols corresponding to their own needs and values.
The idea of dental hygienists, smartly dressed young ladies ushering you into the surgery and carrying out work there is all very well.
This is pure hypocrisy and is aimed at ushering in a new 'superstate' over the heads of the peoples.
It is the ushering in of a new sense of national greatness.
We must take an active part in ushering in new.