释义 |
Definition of slogan in English: slogannoun ˈsləʊɡ(ə)nˈsloʊɡən 1A short and striking or memorable phrase used in advertising. a series of arson attacks gave new meaning to the advertising slogan ‘come home to a real fire’ Example sentencesExamples - Two of America's most famous stores briefly banned products with the iconic slogan, and the advertising watchdog in the UK was flooded with complaints.
- Your name, logo, slogan, even the location you choose and your pricing structure depend on the brand you are trying to create.
- In the advertising world, slogans remain an important tool to capture the attention of the people and hook them to become your customers.
- They've shown that there is more to advertising than a catchy slogan and a memorable logo.
- No one builds a jingle or a slogan or even a brand identity using web advertising.
- Discussion and argumentation are displaced by catchy phrases and slogans, produced according to the practices of the advertising business.
- It is all very well to have these slogans and catch phrases, but if they do not produce or mean anything, then why have them?
- He once arm-wrestled another CEO to determine who got to use an advertising slogan.
- Jess's early collages used advertising images and slogans to present a satirical, absurdist view of sexuality and politics.
- Then I copied the logos and trademarked slogans of the printer manufacturers and started composing my own colorful work.
- These serve a duplicitous ideological function in the manner of advertising slogans.
- Lager has been the subject of many great advertising slogans.
- How about the banners or the slogan or the advertising?
- The slogan follows for a well-known brand of vodka.
- We have just saved millions on a new advertising campaign and slogan.
- I used to spend idle spite-time imagining new slogans for its advertising campaigns.
- The mind boggles at all the other sartorial possibilities - and the associated advertising slogans.
- We are so preoccupied with the concept of milk as it is so fresh and so clean, with its wonderful advertising and catchy slogans.
- A clever slogan to sell vats of hair dye a few seasons back, but does it stand up as social analysis?
- I think there's a popular advertising slogan which can be invoked here.
- 1.1 A motto associated with a political party or movement or other group.
students were chanting slogans Example sentencesExamples - I don't know if this painting was made for that purpose - it could have been to prevent people from covering it with political slogans and posters.
- His speech was dotted by a vocal, slight minority of students who were chanting slogans and rhymes in protest to his performance over seven years of presidency.
- Perhaps it's time someone collected the best catchwords, slogans and political idiom of the 2001 campaign here in Australia.
- He warned voters about parties that simply convey vague messages or chant slogans rather than provide specific viewpoints.
- Men chanting ruling party slogans slashed the tyre of a media car.
- Nowhere is this more pathetically obvious than in the party slogans.
- No one was interested in busting up local stores, though the boards made a fine surface for political posters and slogans.
- The painting of political slogans along a wooden wall that encases the old Woodward's building marked the rally.
- I started driving around with political slogans on my car.
- Demonstrations after football often turn political in Iran, with fans chanting slogans against the state.
- If he's shouting political slogans, the council can't move him.
- Protestors focus energy on creating signs with witty slogans and singing catchy chants for their favorite political issue.
- We've got rejected campaign slogans for the political parties here and here.
- Zou said whether the protest resulted in renewed political conflict with the central government would depend on the slogans chanted during the protest.
- You continued to work for the party and were involved in writing political slogans on walls, although you were aware of the illegality of this activity.
- It is one of the bread-and-butter slogans of the pro-choice movement.
- Bursting crackers and shouting slogans, the party partied.
- None left charged up and ready to chant party slogans or shake their fists in the air.
- Major governmental policy statements and the slogans and publications of political parties are translated into Gaelic.
- He said youths should not only be used by politicians to chant slogans but engaged in sports for them to shape their future.
Synonyms catchphrase, catchline, catchword, jingle, saying, formula, legend watchword, motto, mantra, rallying cry shibboleth North American informal tag line
2historical A Scottish Highland war cry.
Origin Early 16th century: from Scottish Gaelic sluagh-ghairm, from sluagh 'army' + gairm 'shout'. The first slogan was not in the world of advertising or politics, but was the Scottish Gaelic word for a battle cry or war cry, sluagh-ghairm, from sluagh ‘army’ and gairm ‘shout’. For Scottish Highlanders the slogan would often be someone's surname or a place name. For three centuries the word was confined to the work of Scottish writers, but in the early 19th century it gained a wider popularity in the novels of Sir Walter Scott, and later in the century came to mean a short memorable motto or phrase. An early attempt to anglicize sluagh-ghairm produced the spelling slughorn. This was misinterpreted as some kind of military musical instrument, most famously in Robert Browning's atmospheric poem of 1855 Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came ‘Dauntless the slug-horn to my lips I set, And blew.’
Definition of slogan in US English: slogannounˈsloʊɡənˈslōɡən 1A short and striking or memorable phrase used in advertising. Example sentencesExamples - The mind boggles at all the other sartorial possibilities - and the associated advertising slogans.
- How about the banners or the slogan or the advertising?
- Jess's early collages used advertising images and slogans to present a satirical, absurdist view of sexuality and politics.
- No one builds a jingle or a slogan or even a brand identity using web advertising.
- In the advertising world, slogans remain an important tool to capture the attention of the people and hook them to become your customers.
- Discussion and argumentation are displaced by catchy phrases and slogans, produced according to the practices of the advertising business.
- Two of America's most famous stores briefly banned products with the iconic slogan, and the advertising watchdog in the UK was flooded with complaints.
- Your name, logo, slogan, even the location you choose and your pricing structure depend on the brand you are trying to create.
- He once arm-wrestled another CEO to determine who got to use an advertising slogan.
- A clever slogan to sell vats of hair dye a few seasons back, but does it stand up as social analysis?
- They've shown that there is more to advertising than a catchy slogan and a memorable logo.
- Lager has been the subject of many great advertising slogans.
- We have just saved millions on a new advertising campaign and slogan.
- The slogan follows for a well-known brand of vodka.
- We are so preoccupied with the concept of milk as it is so fresh and so clean, with its wonderful advertising and catchy slogans.
- Then I copied the logos and trademarked slogans of the printer manufacturers and started composing my own colorful work.
- I used to spend idle spite-time imagining new slogans for its advertising campaigns.
- It is all very well to have these slogans and catch phrases, but if they do not produce or mean anything, then why have them?
- I think there's a popular advertising slogan which can be invoked here.
- These serve a duplicitous ideological function in the manner of advertising slogans.
- 1.1 A motto associated with a political party or movement or other group.
Example sentencesExamples - It is one of the bread-and-butter slogans of the pro-choice movement.
- Major governmental policy statements and the slogans and publications of political parties are translated into Gaelic.
- Perhaps it's time someone collected the best catchwords, slogans and political idiom of the 2001 campaign here in Australia.
- Nowhere is this more pathetically obvious than in the party slogans.
- The painting of political slogans along a wooden wall that encases the old Woodward's building marked the rally.
- If he's shouting political slogans, the council can't move him.
- Men chanting ruling party slogans slashed the tyre of a media car.
- No one was interested in busting up local stores, though the boards made a fine surface for political posters and slogans.
- His speech was dotted by a vocal, slight minority of students who were chanting slogans and rhymes in protest to his performance over seven years of presidency.
- He said youths should not only be used by politicians to chant slogans but engaged in sports for them to shape their future.
- I don't know if this painting was made for that purpose - it could have been to prevent people from covering it with political slogans and posters.
- We've got rejected campaign slogans for the political parties here and here.
- Protestors focus energy on creating signs with witty slogans and singing catchy chants for their favorite political issue.
- Demonstrations after football often turn political in Iran, with fans chanting slogans against the state.
- He warned voters about parties that simply convey vague messages or chant slogans rather than provide specific viewpoints.
- None left charged up and ready to chant party slogans or shake their fists in the air.
- You continued to work for the party and were involved in writing political slogans on walls, although you were aware of the illegality of this activity.
- Bursting crackers and shouting slogans, the party partied.
- Zou said whether the protest resulted in renewed political conflict with the central government would depend on the slogans chanted during the protest.
- I started driving around with political slogans on my car.
Synonyms catchphrase, catchline, catchword, jingle, saying, formula, legend - 1.2historical A Scottish Highland war cry.
Origin Early 16th century: from Scottish Gaelic sluagh-ghairm, from sluagh ‘army’ + gairm ‘shout’. |