Examples of slogan in the following topics:
-
- These items are usually imprinted with a company's name, logo or slogan, and given away at trade shows, conferences, and as part of guerrilla marketing campaigns.
- These items are usually imprinted with a company's name, logo or slogan, and given away at trade shows, conferences, and as part of guerrilla marketing campaigns.
-
- "No taxation without representation," a slogan originating during the 1750s and 1760s that summarized a primary grievance of the British Colonists in the 13 colonies, was one of the major causes of the American Revolution .
-
- Connectivism does not contribute to a theory or learning reform, due to its use of "language and slogans that are sometimes ‘correct' but are too generalized to guide new practice at the level of how learning actually happens,"
-
- Extrinsic attributes of a brand include Oreo cookie packaging, celebrity spokespersons, and marketing slogans.
- Extrinsic attributes of a brand include oreo cookie packaging, celebrity spokespersons, and marketing slogans.
-
- His campaign slogan, "Shall the People Rule?"
- Republicans used the slogan: "Vote for Taft now, you can vote for Bryan anytime," a sarcastic reference to Bryan's two failed previous presidential campaigns.
-
- "Arsenal of Democracy" was a slogan first used FDR in an American public in a radio broadcast and called for support of the Allied forces.
- "The Arsenal of Democracy" was a slogan used by U.S.
-
- King Cotton was a slogan used by southerners (1860–61) to support secession from the United States.
- The slogan was successful in mobilizing support: by February 1861, the seven states whose economies were based on cotton plantations had seceded and formed the Confederacy.
- King Cotton was a slogan used by southerner (1860-61) to support secession from the United States.
-
- Product awareness can consist of consumer knowledge of brand benefits, features, slogan, tag lines and other brand messaging elements.
-
- His campaign slogan, "I Like Ike," was one of the most popular in American history.
- Eisenhower presidential campaign in Baltimore, Maryland, September 1952, featuring the popular campaign slogan: "I Like Ike".
-
- Rallying under the slogan "Tippecanoe and Tyler, too," the Whigs easily defeated Van Buren .
- He developed a popular slogan "Tippecanoe and Tyler too," which referred to Harrison's military victory over a group of Shawnee Indians at a river in Indiana called Tippecanoe in 1811.