English to Kannada Dictionary showman

showman

ಪ್ರದರ್ಶಕ
definition
noun
Mr Birch's father was a showman travelling with fairs, while his mother joined the circus when she was 15.
a person who produces or presents shows as a profession, especially the proprietor, manager, or MC of a circus, fair, or other variety show.
translation of 'showman'
ಪ್ರದರ್ಶಕ,
ಸರ್ಕಸ್, ಮೃಗಾಲಯ ಮೊದಲಾದವುಗಳ ವ್ಯವಸ್ಥಾಪಕ
example
It's fair to say that Cowell makes great telly, and a day on the LA set of his show offers ample first-hand evidence of what a brilliant 'showman' he is.
He is a performer - a downbeat and deadpan showman, but a 'showman' nonetheless.
A 'showman' might have exploited the discovery by presenting it to an audience and claiming it was evidence of some supernatural agency.
Like all the best teachers, he was a great 'showman' and his grand round presentations were occasionally enhanced with giant home made models of parasites and their vectors.
When he gets in the ring he's a real 'showman' , he just comes up to you and shows off.
When Matsui hears himself characterized as a 'showman' or a performer, he laughs hard and then shakes his head so vigorously it appears his cap might pop off.
Since a 'showman' has to play a variety of roles in order to make a living, Johnny augmented his repertoire with sideshow lecturing, fire eating, and swallowing swords and neon tubes.
He was brash, extremely talented and a 'showman' to the press and public, and for him running was an escape from a life that he would have spent working on a farm with his abusive father.
The Upstagers present the light-hearted story of the American 'showman' on July 15-19 at King's Hall.
Yimou has the eye of a painter, the grace of a dancer and the flamboyance of a circus 'showman' .
We have only to see a skilled 'showman' working his magic to realise how easy it is for the brain to be fooled into thinking the impossible while we are in full possession of our faculties.
King, known for his trademark electric hairdo, is perceived by most of the public as a clown-like 'showman' who, though long-winded, is an entertaining character.
Mr Birch, 29, is the son of a fairground 'showman' and spent his formative years touring fair sites around Yorkshire.
This is a 'showman' who loves the performance for its own sake, not just for the status this case will bring him.
he's a great talker and 'showman' but he lacks depth
A Wall Street operator who was already in his fifties when he moved to London, Schechter is a prodigious talker, a 'showman' and a financial wizard with a gift for innovation.
Mr Birch's father was a 'showman' travelling with fairs, while his mother joined the circus when she was 15.
Pete is a born entertainer and 'showman' , thriving on being on stage with the audience under his control.
He was great - of all the people that I know in the entertainment industry he was greatest 'showman' , because he always changed his show.
Dillon was still the consummate 'showman' and since he wasn't obligated to perform his back catalogue, he was able to be himself.
All of which makes one wonder if Smuin isn't too competent for his own good at this point; he is a skilled 'showman' , and audiences love him for it.
Blackton had failed to keep up with developments in film technique and his films were dramatically unsophisticated, but he was an expert 'showman' .
They were acting like circus 'showmen' , and their targets were elderly Atlantic City gambling types.
The land is owned by Silcock's, a well-known family of 'showmen' who put on fairs around the North-west.
Just one year after the Lumiere brothers gave their first exhibition of projected motion pictures in Paris in 1885, film clips were shown in Shanghai by French and American 'showmen' .
Anything that hints of drama and 'showmanship' will be irresistible to the double Leo.
It's our job to entertain, and we're 'showmen' , we put on a show.
In the carnival, Stanton is the assistant to a phony medium, Madam Zeena, a perfect ancestor of modern 'showmen' like John Edward and Sylvia Browne.
Lorenzo the Lion-Tamer was James Wilson's great-grandfather and one of the 19th century's great circus 'showmen' - the equivalent of today's football star or pop-singer.
A substantial number of Italians who came to Britain as entertainers in the early part of the nineteenth century, especially the Punch and Judy 'showmen' , organ grinders and pedlars of the 1840s.
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