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shows - 2 dictionary results
show
[shoh]
verb, showed, shown or showed, show⋅ing, noun –verb (used with object)
| 1. | to cause or allow to be seen; exhibit; display. |
| 2. | to present or perform as a public entertainment or spectacle: to show a movie. |
| 3. | to indicate; point out: to show the way. |
| 4. | to guide, escort, or usher: He showed me to my room. Show her in. |
| 5. | to explain or make clear; make known: He showed what he meant. |
| 6. | to make known to; inform, instruct, or prove to: I'll show you what I mean. |
| 7. | to prove; demonstrate: His experiment showed the falsity of the theory. |
| 8. | to indicate, register, or mark: The thermometer showed 10 below zero. |
| 9. | to exhibit or offer for sale: to show a house. |
| 10. | to allege, as in a legal document; plead, as a reason or cause. |
| 11. | to produce, as facts in an affidavit or at a hearing. |
| 12. | to express or make evident by appearance, behavior, speech, etc.: to show one's feelings. |
| 13. | to accord or grant (favor, kindness, etc.): He showed mercy in his decision. |
–verb (used without object)
| 14. | to be seen; be or become visible: Does my slip show? |
| 15. | to be seen in a certain way: to show to advantage. |
| 16. | to put on an exhibition or performance; display one's goods or products: Several dress designers are showing in New York now. |
| 17. | Informal. to be present or keep an appointment; show up: He said he would be there, but he didn't show. |
| 18. | to finish third in a horse race, harness race, etc. |
–noun
—Verb phrases| 19. | a theatrical production, performance, or company. |
| 20. | a radio or television program. |
| 21. | a motion picture. |
| 22. | an exposition for dealers or the public of products by various manufacturers in a particular industry, usually held in an exhibition hall, convention facility, or the like: the annual boat show. |
| 23. | any kind of public exhibition or exposition: a show of Renoirs. |
| 24. | ostentatious display: nothing but mere show. |
| 25. | a display, exhibition, or demonstration: a true show of freedom. |
| 26. | an indication; trace: He frowned on the slightest show of emotion. |
| 27. | the position of the competitor who comes in third in a horse race, harness race, etc. Compare place (def. 27b), win 1 (def. 16). |
| 28. | appearance; impression: to make a sorry show. |
| 29. | a sight or spectacle. |
| 30. | an unreal or deceptive appearance: The actress's tears had the show of grief. |
| 31. | an act or instance of showing. |
| 32. | a motion-picture theater. |
| 33. | Informal. a chance: to get a fair show. |
| 34. | Medicine/Medical.
|
| 35. | Chiefly British Informal. any undertaking, group of persons, event, etc.; affair; thing. |
| 36. | show off,
|
| 37. | show up,
|
| 38. | make a show of, to be ostentatious about; affect: Whenever there are visitors, the bosses make a show of being nice to their employees. |
| 39. | run the show, to control a business, situation, etc.; be in charge: My father runs the show in our house. |
| 40. | steal the show,
|
| 41. | stop the show, to win such enthusiastic applause that a theatrical performance is temporarily interrupted. |
Origin:
bef. 900; (v.) ME showen, s(c)hewen to look at, show, OE scēawian to look at; c. D schowen, G schauen; (n.) ME s(c)hew(e), deriv. of the v.
bef. 900; (v.) ME showen, s(c)hewen to look at, show, OE scēawian to look at; c. D schowen, G schauen; (n.) ME s(c)hew(e), deriv. of the v.

Related forms:
show⋅a⋅ble, adjective
showless, adjective
Synonyms:
4. lead, conduct. 5. interpret, clarify, elucidate; reveal, disclose, divulge. 10. assert, affirm. 13. bestow, confer. 23. spectacle. 24, 25. Show, display, ostentation, pomp suggest the presentation of a more or less elaborate, often pretentious, appearance for the public to see. Show often indicates an external appearance that may or may not accord with actual facts: a show of modesty. Display applies to an intentionally conspicuous show: a great display of wealth. Ostentation is vain, ambitious, pretentious, or offensive display: tasteless and vulgar ostentation. Pomp suggests such a show of dignity and authority as characterizes a ceremony of state: The coronation was carried out with pomp and ceremonial. 30. deception, pretense, simulation, illusion.
4. lead, conduct. 5. interpret, clarify, elucidate; reveal, disclose, divulge. 10. assert, affirm. 13. bestow, confer. 23. spectacle. 24, 25. Show, display, ostentation, pomp suggest the presentation of a more or less elaborate, often pretentious, appearance for the public to see. Show often indicates an external appearance that may or may not accord with actual facts: a show of modesty. Display applies to an intentionally conspicuous show: a great display of wealth. Ostentation is vain, ambitious, pretentious, or offensive display: tasteless and vulgar ostentation. Pomp suggests such a show of dignity and authority as characterizes a ceremony of state: The coronation was carried out with pomp and ceremonial. 30. deception, pretense, simulation, illusion.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source
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Link To shows
show (shō) v. showed, shown (shōn) or showed, show·ing, shows v. tr.
show offTo display or behave in an ostentatious or conspicuous way. show up
Idiom(s): get the show on the road Slang To get started. Idiom(s): show (one's) hand
Idiom(s): show (one's) heelsTo depart from quickly; flee. Idiom(s): show (someone) a good timeTo occupy (someone) with amusing things; entertain. [Middle English sheuen, shouen, from Old English scēawian, to look at, display.] Synonyms: These verbs mean to present something to view. Show is the most general: "She hated to show her feelings" (John Galsworthy). |
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Copyright © 2009, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.

