In any crowded place either there is enough air circulation or most people in that place will get a headache
Yes. "Crowded" can be a verb (as in "People crowded the stadium") or an adjective. (as in "The stadium was crowded because of all the people.")
Most cities only have multiplexes now.
Kabuki in Japan is an annual festival. Many people celebrate this by watching special acts or plays in a theatre.
The poor had to stand up and they didn't have a very good view while watching the plays.
They remained entertained by theatre (they liked watching dramas and comedies), and the Olympics games that they held every 4 years.
It was made illegal in the Supreme Court case Schenk v. United States in 1919. The court case was more tailored to talk and advocating Communism, using the "fire in a crowded theatre" idea as an analogous figurative statement, but that's when the phrase was coined and made unlawful.
it means there is a lot of people in an area like maybe on black Friday the stores where crowded
A lot of people had shown up at the party and the place was really crowded.
Bunch of people
if you're allergic then yes if you're not allergic to ham no headache most people say it doesn't give you a headache
The standard collective noun is: an audience of listeners
There were around 80 people crowded into Elie's wagon during the Holocaust.