Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
With the practiced eye of a professional sloganeer, Frost admired the work.
Yet nearly everyone praising him eventually lights upon a backhanded compliment: sloganeer.
He had no desire to use his lyrics to sloganeer or weave colourful, cinematic plots.
In Georgia he became an intolerant sloganeer.
Dimitri would not sloganeer for the Communists.
Mr. Peck remains a sloganeer, given to voice-over statements like "Capitalism has succeeded in buying our silence."
They don't sloganeer.
Tavus Marker, a commercial sloganeer, was the corresponding secretary, a thin, unhealthy-looking man, but a tireless worker nevertheless.
"The Sloganeer" - 5:06
"Heart of a Sloganeer" (Saturday Evening Post, 1929)
Advocates of the system sloganeer about "federalism," meaning that presidential candidates are forced to take into account individual state interests and regional variations in their national campaigns.
The FNC tag line - fair and balanced" - was written by Ailes himself, the master sloganeer.
"Once a Sloganeer" (1922)
, coined by the BBDO sloganeer James Jordan.
The thought often occurs to James J. Jordan Jr., who over the past 35 years has developed a reputation as American advertising's premier sloganeer.
James J. Jordan, Jr. (August 3, 1930 - February 4, 2004) was an American ad-man and sloganeer.
No sloganeer would offer "soak the affluent" (although "marinate the affluent" might go as a bumper sticker in some hyper-educated, low-income areas along the Charles River).
Mr. Pace, a lanky, slouching sloganeer - "profit is not a dirty word," he lectured his workers, "it's why we're here" - invited suggestions about improving productivity.
Emami states that, "He [Sepehri] is not sloganeer preaching, overtly or covertly, the downfall of the autocratic regime (1)".
When ESPN needed a guerilla sloganeer to push its pro football package, it turned to the irrepressible adman, George Lois, the man behind "I Want My Maypo."
Mr. Chavez himself is something of a mystery to much of the world - a charismatic populist who is at the same time a military man, a leftist, a sloganeer and above all an enthusiastic wielder of power.
While conceding that Harrison was no "natural sloganeer" in the manner of his former bandmate John Lennon, pop-culture author Robert Rodriguez has written: "if any ex-Fab had the cachet with his fan base to solicit good works, it was the spiritual Beatle."