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The word 'banners' is correct and commonly used in written English
It is typically used to refer to a large piece of fabric or material bearing a symbol, logo, or message, often used for advertising or decoration. Example: The company ordered several banners to hang outside their storefront for their grand opening event.
Exact(60)
Zarate: leave" – message displayed by Lazio supporters on enormous banners at the club's next home game.
The type of "crimes" the female political activists were punished for included storing and distributing political leaflets, banners and T-shirts and attending meetings and demonstrations.
Some marchers - including about 80 schoolchildren - carried banners saying "An attack on our president is an attack on the ANC".
While the youthful protesters hung out banners of the Occupy movement overlooking Belfast's main thoroughfare the Dublin high court sealed the fate of the southern state's once-richest man – Sean Quinn.
Against the wall lie banners with the slogan "We value the arts: against 100% arts cuts", left over from 2010's fruitless struggle against Somerset Council.
Banners supporting him are dotted round the Bernabéu.
There was no such drama this time around, although security did take away a number of protesters holding "Scientology is Evil" banners.
In September 2014 supporters of the then incumbent president Goodluck Jonathan attempted to galvanise support for his re-election using #bringbackgoodluck2015, with some supporters reported to have turned up at the park where the daily #bringbackourgirls vigil was taking place to display their banners.
I was utterly overwhelmed when I saw people raising anti-Assad banners in the heart of Damascus.
Thus we spray-painted terrible puns onto bed sheets (oh look, another "Declaration of Waugh") and hoisted them in the air as banners, we slapped on our terry toweling hats, we bought the souvenir tour guides and Channel Nine propaganda pamphlets - still walking away with change from a $10 note – and marvelled in the peerless humour of calling Richard Hadlee a wanker all day.
The fishing hub on the Arabian sea coastline has now displayed banners in public places to spread awareness of the prohibitions.
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