Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
For the last 24 hours, "future" has become a Bush campaign catchword.
The term "middle class" has become a political catchword here.
I mean, collaboration has been the big catchword for a while now.
There were such things as ideals, or at least catchwords, to live by and for.
If, therefore, the catchword and first word do not agree, there is likely to be something wrong.
In some cases the catchwords remain at the foot of the pages.
Quality meat products must no longer remain just a catchword.
The phrase had become a catchword between him and Alice.
"Patience is going to be a real catchword for us.
The phrase is a catchword for Western ideas and values.
"Current difficulties" had become the catchword recently for all that was wrong with Russia.
He did not know the catchwords which only need be said to excite a laugh.
Americans were traumatized by the catchwords of their own historical experiences.
Having exhausted their value, catchwords or phrases may then be abandoned.
He said the catchword in local government at the moment was 'challenge'.
"In the last four or five years, branding has become the catchword.
A lot depends on the spin given to that catchword "excellence."
"They did if all to us with catchwords," Paul continued his morning conversation. "
These political catchwords continued to be used as propaganda by later emperors.
Catchword is also a name for a headword in a dictionary.
The catchwords of the classic science fiction era were space and robot.
Murray's early rules were clear and unambiguous: Every word was a possible catchword.
Short snappy catchwords like that always go over big.
I think that's what the catchword is back home."
Parity and the lack of quality are the catchwords.