Someone employed to discover and recruit talented persons (especially in the worlds of entertainment or sports)
Sinónimos
Examples for "scout"
Examples for "scout"
1In answer the scout gave a disgusted wave to the sea beyond.
2The general wants some few cavalrymen for a scout in the Mazatzal.
3Bolitho said, I will use every vessel which can scout for us.
4A minute later, and the fat scout cried out in considerable excitement:
5The sole descendant of the giants was the scout behind the door.
1If you're a talent scout for Decca, I can't sing a note.
2I was once approached by a talent scout in summer stock.
3Cebulski, the Marvel talent scout who brought Cosentino on to write his upcoming issue.
4Having cracked the code, I would become Bullwinkle's top talent scout over the years.
5I'm always going to talent scout and try to find new artists to work with.
6Shazam, the talent scout without the large expense claims.
7At the time, Epstein claimed to help manage Victoria's Secret, and Maxwell was supposedly his talent scout.
8For Daniel Moore, talent scout with Warners UK, In The City provides more than just liquid benefits.
9At the time, Epstein claimed to help manage Victoria's Secret, and Ms Maxwell was supposedly his talent scout.
10It is as a talent scout, packager, and creator of deals that he has met with true success.
11She almost wished that she were a talent scout to deliver the best of them from the streets.
12An order of Irish nuns has caught the eye of a top TV talent scout in the UK.
13On at least one occasion Epstein posed as a talent scout for Victoria's Secret to lure in a victim.
14He was in productions at the Gate and Croydon Repertory Theatre, before being spotted by a Rank talent scout.
15Another fruitless day on the hot streets waiting for a talent scout to pick her out of the crowd.
16There was high praise for people like Columbia Records' talent scout John Hammond and publishers Lou Levy and Artie Mogull.
Translations for talent scout