单词 | slogan |
释义 | slogann. a. A war cry or battle cry; spec. one of those formerly employed by Scottish Highlanders or Borderers, or by the native Irish, usually consisting of a personal surname or the name of a gathering-place. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > armed encounter > [noun] > battle or a battle > battle-cry or slogan descryc1450 ensign1487 escry1489 senyea1510 slogan1513 cry1548 larum1555 hubbaboo1596 field wordc1625 celeusma1680 tecbir1708 war-whoop1739 war cry1748 scalp yell1792 banner-cry1810 battle-cry1815 battle-word1815 hurrah1841 rebel yell1862 on-cry1899 α. β. 1680 G. Mackenzie Sci. Herauldry 97 The Name of Hume have for their Slughorn (or Slogan, as our Southern Shires terme it) a Hume, a Hume.1805 W. Scott Lay of Last Minstrel iv. xxiv. 115 To heaven the Border slogan rung,..The English war-cry answered wide.1861 G. Smith Irish Hist. 67 An Act..was passed to abolish the words Crom-a-boo and Butler-a-boo, the Slogans of these two clans.1879 W. H. Dixon Royal Windsor III. 3 Edward had struck the Genoese,..Monmouth the French to one great Slogan, that of St. George of England.1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid vii. xi. 87 The slogorne, ensenȝe, or the wache cry. c1540 J. Bellenden tr. H. Boece Hyst. & Cron. Scotl. ii. xv. f. 20/1 Yt nane of thaym name thair capitane with ony vthir sloggorne bot with the auld name of that Tribe. a1572 J. Knox Hist. Reformation Scotl. in Wks. (1846) I. 87 Great was the noyse..that was heard, whill that everie man calles his awin sloghorne. a1578 R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (1899) II. 263 Thay hard ane slughorne cryand on the gait in this maner ‘ane hammiltowne’, ‘ane hammiltowne’. 1680 G. Mackenzie Sci. Herauldry 97 Not unlike these Motto's are our Slughorns, which are called Cris de guerre in France. a1712 G. Martine Reliquiæ Divi Andreae (1797) 3 They..go about begging, and use still to recite the sluggornes of most of the true ancient surnames of Scotland, from old experience and observation. 1723 W. Buchanan Family Buchanan 165 The isle of Clareinch was the slogurn or call of war, proper to the family of Buchanan. 1851 M. A. Denham Slogans N. Eng. 1 Occasionally, as in Scotland, the name of the rendezvous was used as a Slughorn. b. transferred. The distinctive note, phrase, cry, etc. of any person or body of persons; now esp. a motto associated with a political party or movement or other group, or a short and striking or memorable phrase used in advertising. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > word or cry > [noun] > slogan or catchword slogan1704 catchword1715 nayword1828 catchphrase1834 catchline1842 catchcry1843 yell1867 watch-cry1882 buzzword1946 in word1964 1704 in Maidment Scott. Pasquils (1868) 384 Your slughons are falsehood and plunder. a1859 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. (1861) V. xxv. 301 The popular slogans on both sides were indefatigably repeated. 1880 A. D. Whitney Odd or Even? xiv ‘Duty, God, immortality’—the very slogan of the pulpit. 1887 A. Lang Bks. & Bookmen 114 Printers and authors had their emblems and their private literary slogans. 1916 Literary Digest 1 Jan. 3/1 The German-Americans, committed to the slogan ‘Anything to beat Wilson’, may have to vote for the Colonel or see the President reelected. 1922 Times 20 June 7/4 ‘Post early.’ New P.O. slogan on letters. 1928 Publishers' Weekly 9 June 2386 As an advertising man, Mr. Calkins believes the slogan ‘a cent a copy to sell the art of reading’, a great and revolutionary one. 1930 Punch 19 Feb. 204/1 ‘Look at the price of bacon’ was his slogan. 1951 H. Arendt Burden of our Time i. ii. 38 Antisemitic slogans were highly effective in mobilizing large strata of the population. 1958 P. Gibbs Curtains of Yesterday xix. 157 On the other side [of an ancient gateway] with big letters deeply carved was the new slogan of Lenin's Russia. ‘Religion is the Opium of the People.’ 1968 V. S. Pritchett Cab at Door ix. 163 All sects have their jargon and Father, eager as an advertising man is for slogans, had picked them all up and lived by them. 1971 H. Macmillan Riding Storm xv. 478 The somewhat disingenuous slogan of ‘ban the bomb’. 1972 F. Fitzgerald Fire in Lake viii. 277 Thousands of soldiers and civil servants marched with the dock workers shouting anti-government and occasionally anti-American slogans. 1980 R. Scruton Meaning of Conservatism iii. 59 One particular slogan will later occupy our attention—‘equality of opportunity’. Compounds C1. General attributive. slogan-cry n. ΚΠ 1849 W. E. Aytoun Lays Sc. Cavaliers (ed. 2) 46 That day through high Dunedin's streets, Had pealed the slogan-cry. slogan song n. ΚΠ c1860 J. R. Randall Maryland vi Come..And ring thy dauntless slogan song, Maryland! slogan yell n. ΚΠ 1808 W. Scott Marmion v. iv. 245 Nor harp, nor pipe, his ear could please, Like the loud slogan yell. C2. slogan-shouter n. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > [noun] > person vociferator1639 bawler1656 shouter1692 vociferant1760 slogan-shouter1940 society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > word or cry > [noun] > slogan or catchword > one who slogan-shouter1940 1940 G. Cunningham Jrnl. 14 Dec. in N. Mitchell Sir G. Cunningham (1968) iv. 83 Heard from Peshawar that slogan shouters had been told to go home. 1968 N. Mitchell Sir G. Cunningham (1968) iv. 83 On the 12th, the slogan shouters sent notices to the Deputy Commissioner where and when they would shout their slogans on 14th December. slogan-shouting n. and adj. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > [adjective] > shouting belching1581 shouting1601 bawling1603 vociferant1609 vociferous?1611 vociferatinga1625 obstropolous1748 slogan-shouting1940 the mind > language > speech > manner of speaking > [noun] > loud or angry speech > shouting of slogans slogan-shouting1940 society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > word or cry > [adjective] > of or relating to expressing slogans sloganizing1940 slogan-shouting1940 sloganeering1941 sloganized1970 society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > word or cry > [noun] > slogan or catchword > the shouting of slogans slogan-shouting1940 1940 G. Cunningham Jrnl. 24 Dec. in N. Mitchell Sir G. Cunningham (1968) iv. 84 Slogan shouting by Satyagrahis has stopped as Gandhi has declared a holiday for Christmas. 1972 J. Biggs-Davison Africa—Hope Deferred x. 98 These are but a few of the problems facing independent Africa that can no longer be concealed by an excess of slogan-shouting. 1976 M. Zia-ud-Din Mem. Pakistani Diplomat 63 Wherever it stopped there were large crowds of slogan-shouting Muslims. 1978 Jrnl. Royal Soc. Arts 126 696/2 Medical Inspection destroys the ‘nobility’ of war more readily than 1,000 slogan-shouting demonstrators. C3. slogan-like adj. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > word or cry > [adjective] > like or similar to a slogan slogan-like1936 1936 L. Wirth & E. A. Shils tr. K. Mannheim Ideol. & Utopia i. 36 Two slogan-like concepts ‘ideology and utopia’. 1975 Lang. for Life (Dept. Educ. & Sci.) xiii. 199 Public debate..has often been conducted through a series of slogan-like headings: progressive, formal, integration, basics, and several more. Derivatives ˈsloganed adj. marked with a slogan. ΘΚΠ society > communication > writing > written text > an inscription > [adjective] > bearing inscription inwrittena1382 storied1481 lettered1593 charactered1598 mottoed1738 inscriptional1777 inscribed1826 legended1847 inscriptured1881 inscriptioned1888 inscripted1923 sloganed1966 1966 ‘G. Douglas’ Odd Woman Out ix. 60 This tall girl..in jeans and a sloganed sweater. 1978 Church Times 1 Sept. 15/2 With..leather waistcoats or sloganed T-shirts. 1979 Sci. Amer. Apr. 30/1 A graffiti remover which was developed by the organic chemistry section in response to a government campaign to clean-up the much-sloganed areas of Belfast and Londonderry. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online June 2021). < n.1513 |
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