Slogans
in sentence
144 examples of Slogans in a sentence
But any examination of the protesters’
slogans
and demands clearly indicates otherwise.
No sooner had a newly-elected member taken his oath than a number of MPs from the Bahujan Samaj Party, which rules India’s largest state, Uttar Pradesh, stormed into the well of the House, shouting
slogans
and waving placards in protest against the government’s land-acquisition policies.
While things have not yet gone so far in the national legislature, the code of conduct that is imparted to all newly-elected MPs – including injunctions against speaking out of turn, shouting slogans, waving placards, and marching into the well of the House – is routinely honored in the breach.
Marching in the streets shouting
slogans
at elected leaders will not make the difference.
It has a committed electorate of its own, whose sentiments are responsive to Zhirinovsky's populist slogans, and a party apparatus staffed by committed workers.
The crowd began to chant nationalist slogans, and then proceeded to beat up passersby who did not look Slavic.
Obama’s
slogans
are examples of “dead metaphors”: they are not part of an overall conceptual scheme.
On the far left, the quasi-mystical allure of anti-globalization and anti-capitalism – a muddled brew of simplistic
slogans
and easy scapegoats – shares much with the far right.
Desperate for any assistance at all, Bolivia's governments ultimately uprooted thousands of hectares of peasant crops--and got almost nothing in return but a lot of phony
slogans
about alternative development.
These facts beg the question: are Iran’s declared intentions serious, or are they simply
slogans
aimed at reinforcing national unity?
He came to regret the uses to which the ambiguous language of the “long telegram” and his “X” article had been put, lamenting that democracies could pursue a foreign policy only on the “primitive level of
slogans
and jingoistic ideological inspiration.”
But, even after the 18th Congress, the new Chinese leadership’s attempts at bolstering the Party’s popularity will go only as far as promoting new political
slogans.
The international initiatives of past administrations have been replaced by empty slogans, hollow gestures, and, of course, “alternative facts.”
There are always politicians willing to mimic populist
slogans
and methods to win over voters, even if doing so divides their own party.
The demand for the abolition of censorship was one of the first political
slogans
of the Polish March ‘68.
“More strength for our Viennese blood,” one of his election slogans, gives an idea of Strache’s typical tone.
Their favored
slogans
– “Take back our country” or “Make America great again” – invoke a past when neither the New Deal nor the expansion of civil rights disturbed the peace of upstanding white Christians.
The first time, they gained a governing plurality, put their
slogans
into practice, and failed to maintain their popular support.
Fortunately, we were able to find a study conducted in 1990 by the political scientists James Gibson, Raymond Duch, and Kent Tedin (GDT), which asked questions in Moscow that, like ours, got past
slogans
to assess basic values.
But, beyond slogans, there is an underlying fault line between those who have the cultural capacity to embrace change and those who resist it by adhering to traditional ideas about how one's life and, by extension, society, should be organized.
Two of the most effective
slogans
of the Brexit and Trump campaigns have been “Take back control” and “I want my country back.”
President George W. Bush has been short on neither initiatives nor catchy
slogans
and acronyms.
Nearly two decades later, Netanyahu remains committed to old, vacuous
slogans
about a “united Jerusalem” – a conviction that could, yet again, unravel the Israel-Palestine peace process.
He seems unaware that his campaign is over, that he could fail catastrophically and permanently in his new role, and that it is in his own interest to ensure that his proposals are sound, not just as slogans, but as actual policies that will keep the US safe and create prosperity.
Culture And DiplomacyHAMBURG: In a world without a compass, few
slogans
enjoy as much popularity as the "Clash of Civilizations", promoted by Harvard professor Samual Huntington.
Inspired by late-nineteenth-century
slogans
such as “Beef, Biceps, and the Bhagavad Gita,” the RSS emulated European fascists by instilling their own ideals of military discipline in young Hindus in khaki uniforms.
With a narcissistic personality and a short attention span, and lacking experience in world affairs, he tends to project
slogans
rather than strategy in foreign policy.
In each case, his glib campaign
slogans
have run up against the hard reality of actually making policy.
Some Italians responded violently; some Italian and Romanian politicians, eager to offer quick and tough solutions, made scandalous statements that echoed the xenophobic and totalitarian
slogans
of the past.
So you read
slogans
like "Arbeit macht frei" or "Gott mit uns" in Polish, as well as Polish jingoistic sayings, such as "Poland for Poles" or "Lithuania, my fatherland," in German.
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