shusher

shusher

(ˈʃʊʃə)
n
a person who tends to quieten others
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
So, he used the comparative form of Shush and called it Shush-tar, effectively meaning Shusher than Shush.
Examples of Polari include: Riar Shusher, meaning hairdresser, Mogue (mislead or lie), Fortuni (gorgeous) and Nanty Jaree (no drinks).
The Sistine Shusher! It was as if the crowd had received a holy bee-yatch slap.
So, he called it Shushtar, using the comparative form of Shush and effectively calling the new city Shusher than Shush.
Examples of Polari include: Riar Shusher, meaning hairdresser; Mogue - meaning to mislead or lie; and Nanty Jaree, which translates as no drinks.
Sir Edmund shushes the shushers in a library, and barks at the tourists in a beached submarine.
This will help to build a great rapport with your tweens and show them that librarians are no longer the bun-wearing shushers we once were.
She puts down the laminated paw-print cutouts for children to follow to the reading areas, "and I put up signs - we call them 'shushers' - to remind people to be quiet so the readers can concentrate."
And that's the most annoying thing about the shushers - the Oscar-winning singer songwriter and Frames frontman has easily enough in his armoury to silence even the most boisterous audience.
The shushers increased in number and volume, and attendants moved in in a pincer movement to remove the man.