Sentence examples for strange slogan from inspiring English sources

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It's a strange slogan for a politician to adopt at a time of high unemployment and economic uncertainty, but Romney invokes it in his book and he uses it in interviews, because it's precisely what he means by business.

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It's not politically didactic, like a tricolour, the hammer & sickle or the strange positivist slogans of the Brazilian flag, but it unites some of the constituent nations of the United Kingdom, with Ireland's St Patrick's Cross retained after 1922 as a concession to Ulster Unionists, but with no pictorial representation of Wales whatsoever.

Novelty gifts — T-shirts with funny slogans, strange knick-knacks, crass board games, and so on.

A minister once said to a Coca-Cola bottler, "I see a strange connection between your slogan, 'The pause that refreshes,' and Christ's own words, 'Come unto me all ye that travail, and I will refresh you".' Roy Spence, owner of the advertising agency GSD&M in Austin, Tex., says a brand must be built and portrayed as "a sacred promise of what you stand for".

From a distance, they look like normal American traffic signs, but they carry images of strange creatures and provocative slogans: "I love the touch of silken flesh", "The body of a dead enemy always smells sweet", "Madness singing".

The concept for the Henn-na Hotel (whose name means strange and change and whose slogan is "A Commitment for Evolution") was first announced on January 28, but more details about its operations have trickled in over the past week.

More socially conservative liberals may be uncomfortable at the protesters' dress code, or their masks, or slogans that sound strange to older ears.

Billie Holiday didn't revert to slogans when she performed "Strange Fruit" — her voice was enough.

Billie Holiday didn't revert to slogans when she performed "Strange Fruit"—her voice was enough.

Mr Idei's slogan, a masterpiece of that strange idiom known as "Japlish", was "digital dream kids".

By Ward Morehouse The New Yorker, April 22, 1939 P. 65 Names of Inns, strange foods served in strange sounding places; slogans and sales phrases; women with unusual occupations.

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