[
US
/ˈsɫoʊɡən/
]
[ UK /slˈəʊɡən/ ]
[ UK /slˈəʊɡən/ ]
NOUN
- a favorite saying of a sect or political group
How To Use slogan In A Sentence
- There is actually a dishonesty, really, about that slogan that says to keep it in the laboratory and it will be OK.
- Photographs of Ayesha were appearing in all the papers, and the pilgrims even passed advertising hoardings on which the lepidopteral beauty had been painted three times as large as life, beside slogans reading _Our cloths also are as delicate as a butterfly's wing_, or suchlike. The Satanic Verses
- So even as they mutter racist slogans, members of Siberia's Lumpenproletariat benefit from proximity to the dragon.
- Many shops and businesses were shut while crowds blocked traffic and chanted anti-government slogans. Times, Sunday Times
- No one builds a jingle or a slogan or even a brand identity using web advertising.
- The "freedom to learn" has become just another one of the government's empty slogans.
- Such a slogan will bind us hand and foot.
- Too often, they were simply bantered around as high-sounding slogans.
- Products may also be different for less tangible reasons, such as perceived quality enhanced by brand names or advertising slogans. Microeconomics: Price Theory in Practice
- Such a slogan will bind us hand and foot.