Words similar to advertisement
- ad-maker
- ad-makers
- ad-revenue-sharing
- ad-sales
- ad-tracking
- adage
- adages
- adagio
- adamance
- adamant
- adventures
- adventuresome
- adventuring
- adventurism
- adventurous
- adverb
- adverb-adjective
- adverbial
- adverbs
- adversarial
- adversity
- advert
- advertise
- advertised
- advertised--is
- advertisement
- advertisement--
- advertisement-free
- advertisementb
- advertisements
- advertisements—suffered
Example sentences for: advertisement
How can you use “advertisement” in a sentence? Here are some example sentences to help you improve your vocabulary:
In attempting to "walk back the cat" (to use the increasingly prevalent argot of the intelligence services for tracing a chain of events backward to establish a point of origin), I have found yadda - yadda - yadda strands in episodes of Seinfeld and Home Improvement . The most compelling manifestation, though, is in an advertisement for Converse athletic shoes featuring images of Kevin Johnson of the Phoenix Suns that was aired on national television during last spring's basketball championships:
The presence of AT&T allows for more sorting in the marketplace, which means that those people who care more about freedom can move in one direction, with the legions of hackers and researchers; while those who care more about security can migrate to a network that gives them protection against anything from advertisement to smut.
On 22 February 1989, in a full-page color advertisement in The Times , the Honeywell was severed, leaving the new company name Bull . At the same time, the big brains came up with the slogan To business problems , we say Bull , rather an unfortunate decision for two reasons: first, bull is an almost-polite shortening of bullshit , as (almost) everyone knows; second, bull (or Bull !) as a retort means `bullshit; nonsense; balderdash' and, particularly, `Whatever you said [like, “I have a business problem”] is a lot of bullshit.
For instance, I was well past 30 when I was reading an advertisement aloud: “Do you suffer the painful humiliation of psoriasis?”
[From an advertisement for a lawn product on KCMO-TV, Kansas City, Missouri, . Submitted by ]
Loading...