to draw a crowd

  • 1draw a crowd — phrase if an event draws a crowd, a large number of people come to watch it Thesaurus: to perform or entertain, or to be performedhyponym Main entry: draw …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 2draw a crowd — if an event draws a crowd, a large number of people come to watch it …

    English dictionary

  • 3draw the crowd — attract a large group of people …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 4Crowd manipulation — March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963 led by Martin Luther King Vladmir Lenin addresses a crowd of chee …

    Wikipedia

  • 5crowd — I n. throng 1) to attract, draw a crowd 2) to disperse a crowd 3) an enormous, huge, tremendous; overflow crowd 4) a crowd collects, gathers; disperses; thins out 5) a crowd mills, swarms (around the entrance) audience 6) a capacity crowd group… …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 6draw — draw1 [ drɔ ] (past tense drew [ dru ] ; past participle drawn [ drɔn ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 create picture ▸ 2 move slowly/smoothly ▸ 3 pull something ▸ 4 get information from ▸ 5 choose someone/something ▸ 6 compare two things ▸ 7 get particular… …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 7draw — 1 verb past tense drew, past participle drawn PICTURE/DESCRIPTION 1 WITH PENCIL (I, T) to make a picture of something with a pencil or pen: Can I draw your portrait? | I ve never been able to draw well. | draw sb sth/draw sth for sb: Hans drew… …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 8draw — I UK [drɔː] / US [drɔ] verb Word forms draw : present tense I/you/we/they draw he/she/it draws present participle drawing past tense drew UK [druː] / US [dru] past participle drawn UK [drɔːn] / US [drɔn] *** 1) a) [intransitive/transitive] to… …

    English dictionary

  • 9draw — [c]/drɔ / (say draw) verb (drew /dru / (say drooh), drawn, drawing) –verb (t) 1. (sometimes followed by along, away, in, out …

  • 10draw — {{11}}draw (n.) game or contest that ends without a winner, attested first in drawn match (1610s), of uncertain origin; some speculate it is from withdraw. Draw game is from 1825. As a verb, to leave undecided, from 1837. {{12}}draw (v.) c.1200,… …

    Etymology dictionary