verb, showed, shown or showed, show⋅ing, noun | 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. |
| 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. |
| 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. |

show (shō)
n.
The first discharge of blood in menstruation.
The discharge of bloody mucus from the vagina indicating the start of labor.
steal the show
Also, steal the spotlight. Be the center of attention, as in The speeches were interesting but Eliza's singing stole the show. This idiom alludes to unexpectedly outshining the rest of the cast in a theatrical production. [First half of 1900s]