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单词 banner
释义
noun ˈbanəˈbænər
  • 1A long strip of cloth bearing a slogan or design, carried in a demonstration or procession or hung in a public place.

    a nuclear disarmament banner was carried round the war memorial
    students waved banners and chanted slogans
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Crowds flooded into Tiananmen Square, shouting slogans and carrying banners.
    • Nearly 5,000 people protested in central Sofia, carrying banners with slogans such as ‘Why?’
    • Before the rally, about 1,000 people marched through the centre of Camden, waving banners and chanting slogans against the imminent closure.
    • The protesters displayed antiwar banners and chanted antiwar slogans in front of policemen carrying rifles and a concrete blockade installed in street of the embassy compound.
    • They carried banners and chanted slogans condemning the government for making false election campaign promises that it would improve working conditions.
    • Over the path are slender steel arches designed to carry banners that give a festive and heraldic flavour to both internal and external paths.
    • Monaghan joined a number of men carrying a banner bearing the slogan ‘Free all political prisoners now’.
    • Of course, there will be people who will say that these dedicated campaigners were foolish to wave banners carrying the slogans ‘Farmers for Blair!’
    • Workers carried placards and banners, and raised slogans against privatisation and increases in electricity prices.
    • Another large group of elderly men carried regimental banners in procession up the aisle.
    • A new supporters' club has adopted the name ‘Red Ultras’ and carried a banner with the slogan into matches at Pittodrie and in Glasgow.
    • The white-clad girls led the procession carrying banners that called for communal harmony.
    • The Japanese Embassy cautioned Japanese in China not to wear their blue national team jerseys or carry firecrackers or banners with confrontational slogans to the final.
    • By marching together, carrying banners and chanting slogans, thousands of students peacefully displayed their anger and emotion against the war that had started.
    • Large numbers of riot police were deployed against the small demonstration and confiscated banners and posters being carried by the unionists.
    • Each person was forced to sign an agreement not to carry placards or banners, shout slogans, or wear clothes with written words of complaint.
    • Over 10,000 miners held a demonstration, carrying a banner denouncing the government and calling for the arrest and public trial of the mine bureau directors.
    • A young person from each parish will carry their parish banner in the entrance procession.
    • Workers carried a large Solidarity banner and chanted antigovernment slogans during the demonstration.
    • They carried banners with the slogan ‘No to Terrorism’.
    Synonyms
    placard, sign, poster, notice
    1. 1.1historical A flag on a pole used as the standard of a monarch, knight, or army.
      the standard bearers followed, banners of bright red and yellow depicting dragons and stags
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The rebel army had lowered its banners and was taking cover in the forests that were interspersed between the farmland found outside of the gleaming city.
      • Appropriately, the cultural-historical monument has been built close to where King Sakha raised his banner of revolt and ultimately welded his people into the force that it is today.
      • The day before Ælfred was expected two riders came down the clay road through Kilton, bearing each the banner of the King of Wessex.
      • Better to signify an army with a few banners than to express it with a cast of thousands.
      • The bright red and gold banners heralded the presence of the house of Pyropoint.
      Synonyms
      flag, standard, ensign, jack, colour(s), pennant, pennon, streamer, banderole
      British pendant
      Nautical burgee
      in ancient Rome vexillum
      rare gonfalon, guidon, labarum
    2. 1.2 Used in reference to support for a belief or principle.
      the government is flying the free trade banner
      Example sentencesExamples
      • With just a slight stretch of the imagination, fanatical support for a football club could come under the religion banner.
      • We didn't have soft money, but we had ideas and we had vision and we had principles and we had things that attracted Americans to our banner.
      • How sad it was to see so much fervour amongst my own countrymen in taking up the banner of support for the US in their actions against Iraq.
      • Adam Smith, whose banner Milton Friedman has borne high, said, ‘There is much ruin in a nation.’
      • In asserting this, the Reformation unfurls the banner of Free Spirit and proclaims as its essential principle: Man is in his very nature destined to be free.
  • 2A heading or advertisement appearing on a web page in the form of a bar, column, or box.

    as modifier a banner ad
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The banner ad for the ASCA that is running on this web site does displace banners from paying advertisers.
    • Only those that could afford to buy advertising banners and pay for placement in the search engines would ever see any traffic.
    • Users visiting websites that carry banner advertising delivered by our system were periodically delivered a file from the compromised site.
    • Adware is software that displays advertisements like banners and pop-ups on your computer.
    • Most of the commercial media on the Web is free and supported by banner and text ads.
    • Users hate pop-up ads almost as much as they do spam, but they get noticed better than banners so advertisers continue to demand them from Web sites.
    • Hence, hate-related advertisement banners may appear on Web sites unrelated to hate messages.
    • Set up a rotating banner system on your web site and track response rates.
    • The name of the game is to broadcast banners in front of as many voters while they're online, so more of them can click on the banner, visit the Web site and learn about the candidate.
    • Wippit also provides licensed tunes as ringtones, and receives further revenue from advertising banners on its sharing software.
    • He blamed the weakness of advertising buttons, the glut of banners and e-mailed spam, and low ‘clickthrough’ rates.
    • Special requests were sent to technology centres in various universities and colleges to allow us to place a banner on their Web site and to invite student participation.
    • I see plenty of websites that have banners and graphics strewn all over the place with no rhyme or reason.
    • Like many Internet companies, the news-oriented site is launching new, larger ad spaces aimed at keeping advertisers from abandoning banners.
    • It has also resisted the temptation to turn its pages into graphics-heavy works of art laden with advertising banners and dross - a decision which has endeared it to many users.
    • The most common technique is online advertising using banners and text links.
    • The end result is that you only see what Microsoft wants you to see on their search site: pop up ads, big flashy advertising banners, and of course, their search results.
    • This is similar to the recent evolution of online advertising from destination web sites and branded banners to pay for click pricing.
    • A website logo or banner should be a static graphic or text element on the page.
    • The program was supported by print, the live TV spots and Web banners.
adjectiveˈbanəˈbænər
North American
  • attributive Excellent; outstanding.

    the company was having a banner year
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The decade had two true banner years, at its beginning and its midpoint.
    • Green's banner season was not entirely a surprise, though.
    • His Noodles & Co. restaurant chain has had another banner year, and he's reaped some rewards from the down economy.
    • The shouts went up from men who'd already seen Mathian's banner fall, and panic spread out from them like pestilence.
    • Different types of oranges have good years and bad years, L' Hoste says, adding that one banner crop is typically balanced by a sluggish one.
    • To be sure, and despite some close calls, it was another banner year for Wall Street Structured Finance.
    • The offense still is one of the league's best with WRs Ed McCaffrey and Rod Smith having banner seasons.
    • Last year was another banner year for the U.S. motorcycle market, which continues to enjoy growth across the board.
    • Now that Gonzalez has rejected the Yankees, perhaps he can concentrate on turning a disappointing season into another banner year.
    • As his Roush Racing teammates had banner seasons, Jeff Burton continued to slide.
    • It has been another banner year for baseball's most storied, hated franchise.
    • Well, if this is the kind of tone he wants to set for his party, 2006 will be another banner year for Republicans.
    • But even in that banner year, Apple's creative energy hasn't amounted to very much in financial terms.
    • Stunningly, while their founder and guiding spirit has been sidelined, Graves's firms have had banner years.

Derivatives

  • adjective ˈbanədˈbænərd
    • ‘The New York Post’ this morning bannered Congressman Dick Gephardt as Kerry's vice presidential running mate.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She moved toward from the foyer to the study, pointing out the tinsel that lined the banister of the staircase and bannered the arched walkways, ‘Don't you like the decorations?
      • Note that the launch tower is bannered with ads and logos.
      • Though housed snugly below a similarly bannered bar, the restaurant has created its own separate identity.
      • ‘A Different Kind of Republican’ was the way the Washington Post Web site bannered the story after Hastert picked Dreier.

Origin

Middle English: from Old French baniere, ultimately of Germanic origin and related to band2.

  • band from Old English:

    A band in the sense ‘a strip of something’ comes from the same Germanic root as bind (Old English) and bond (Middle English). Bend is a variant found in bend sinister (early 17th century), a broad diagonal stripe from top right to bottom left of a shield, a supposed sign of bastardy. Bandage (late 16th century) and bandbox (mid 17th century), now a box for carrying hats, but originally for carrying neckbands, come from this word. In early use a band in the sense ‘a group’, usually consisted of armed men, robbers, or assassins. The first groups of musicians called a band (in the 17th century) were attached to regiments of the army. Banner (Middle English) is related. A bandwagon (mid 19th century) was a wagon used for carrying the band in a parade or procession. The word now occurs more often in phrases such as to jump on the bandwagon. This use developed in America in the late 19th century.

Rhymes

Alana, Anna, bandanna, Branagh, canna, canner, Diana, fanner, Fermanagh, Guyana, Hannah, Havana, hosanna, Indiana, Joanna, lanner, Louisiana, manna, manner, manor, Montana, nana, planner, Pollyanna, Rosanna, savannah, scanner, spanner, Susanna, tanner
 
 
nounˈbænərˈbanər
  • 1A long strip of cloth bearing a slogan or design, hung in a public place or carried in a demonstration or procession.

    students waved banners and chanted slogans
    a banner in the front window announced “Grand Reopening”
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Over the path are slender steel arches designed to carry banners that give a festive and heraldic flavour to both internal and external paths.
    • Workers carried a large Solidarity banner and chanted antigovernment slogans during the demonstration.
    • Before the rally, about 1,000 people marched through the centre of Camden, waving banners and chanting slogans against the imminent closure.
    • Another large group of elderly men carried regimental banners in procession up the aisle.
    • Nearly 5,000 people protested in central Sofia, carrying banners with slogans such as ‘Why?’
    • A young person from each parish will carry their parish banner in the entrance procession.
    • Over 10,000 miners held a demonstration, carrying a banner denouncing the government and calling for the arrest and public trial of the mine bureau directors.
    • Workers carried placards and banners, and raised slogans against privatisation and increases in electricity prices.
    • Crowds flooded into Tiananmen Square, shouting slogans and carrying banners.
    • The protesters displayed antiwar banners and chanted antiwar slogans in front of policemen carrying rifles and a concrete blockade installed in street of the embassy compound.
    • Monaghan joined a number of men carrying a banner bearing the slogan ‘Free all political prisoners now’.
    • Of course, there will be people who will say that these dedicated campaigners were foolish to wave banners carrying the slogans ‘Farmers for Blair!’
    • They carried banners and chanted slogans condemning the government for making false election campaign promises that it would improve working conditions.
    • The white-clad girls led the procession carrying banners that called for communal harmony.
    • They carried banners with the slogan ‘No to Terrorism’.
    • The Japanese Embassy cautioned Japanese in China not to wear their blue national team jerseys or carry firecrackers or banners with confrontational slogans to the final.
    • Each person was forced to sign an agreement not to carry placards or banners, shout slogans, or wear clothes with written words of complaint.
    • A new supporters' club has adopted the name ‘Red Ultras’ and carried a banner with the slogan into matches at Pittodrie and in Glasgow.
    • Large numbers of riot police were deployed against the small demonstration and confiscated banners and posters being carried by the unionists.
    • By marching together, carrying banners and chanting slogans, thousands of students peacefully displayed their anger and emotion against the war that had started.
    Synonyms
    placard, sign, poster, notice
    1. 1.1historical A flag on a pole used as the standard of a monarch, army, or knight.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The bright red and gold banners heralded the presence of the house of Pyropoint.
      • Appropriately, the cultural-historical monument has been built close to where King Sakha raised his banner of revolt and ultimately welded his people into the force that it is today.
      • Better to signify an army with a few banners than to express it with a cast of thousands.
      • The rebel army had lowered its banners and was taking cover in the forests that were interspersed between the farmland found outside of the gleaming city.
      • The day before Ælfred was expected two riders came down the clay road through Kilton, bearing each the banner of the King of Wessex.
      Synonyms
      flag, standard, ensign, jack, colour, colours, pennant, pennon, streamer, banderole
    2. 1.2 An idea or principle used to rally public opinion.
      the administration is flying the free trade banner
      Example sentencesExamples
      • With just a slight stretch of the imagination, fanatical support for a football club could come under the religion banner.
      • We didn't have soft money, but we had ideas and we had vision and we had principles and we had things that attracted Americans to our banner.
      • How sad it was to see so much fervour amongst my own countrymen in taking up the banner of support for the US in their actions against Iraq.
      • In asserting this, the Reformation unfurls the banner of Free Spirit and proclaims as its essential principle: Man is in his very nature destined to be free.
      • Adam Smith, whose banner Milton Friedman has borne high, said, ‘There is much ruin in a nation.’
  • 2A heading or advertisement appearing on a web page in the form of a bar, column, or box.

    as modifier a banner ad
    to get a new banner now, click Step 1
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Special requests were sent to technology centres in various universities and colleges to allow us to place a banner on their Web site and to invite student participation.
    • Hence, hate-related advertisement banners may appear on Web sites unrelated to hate messages.
    • A website logo or banner should be a static graphic or text element on the page.
    • Users visiting websites that carry banner advertising delivered by our system were periodically delivered a file from the compromised site.
    • The banner ad for the ASCA that is running on this web site does displace banners from paying advertisers.
    • The name of the game is to broadcast banners in front of as many voters while they're online, so more of them can click on the banner, visit the Web site and learn about the candidate.
    • This is similar to the recent evolution of online advertising from destination web sites and branded banners to pay for click pricing.
    • The end result is that you only see what Microsoft wants you to see on their search site: pop up ads, big flashy advertising banners, and of course, their search results.
    • The most common technique is online advertising using banners and text links.
    • Wippit also provides licensed tunes as ringtones, and receives further revenue from advertising banners on its sharing software.
    • Only those that could afford to buy advertising banners and pay for placement in the search engines would ever see any traffic.
    • He blamed the weakness of advertising buttons, the glut of banners and e-mailed spam, and low ‘clickthrough’ rates.
    • Most of the commercial media on the Web is free and supported by banner and text ads.
    • Users hate pop-up ads almost as much as they do spam, but they get noticed better than banners so advertisers continue to demand them from Web sites.
    • Adware is software that displays advertisements like banners and pop-ups on your computer.
    • It has also resisted the temptation to turn its pages into graphics-heavy works of art laden with advertising banners and dross - a decision which has endeared it to many users.
    • The program was supported by print, the live TV spots and Web banners.
    • Set up a rotating banner system on your web site and track response rates.
    • I see plenty of websites that have banners and graphics strewn all over the place with no rhyme or reason.
    • Like many Internet companies, the news-oriented site is launching new, larger ad spaces aimed at keeping advertisers from abandoning banners.
adjectiveˈbænərˈbanər
North American
  • attributive Excellent; outstanding.

    I predict that 1998 will be a banner year
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Green's banner season was not entirely a surprise, though.
    • Well, if this is the kind of tone he wants to set for his party, 2006 will be another banner year for Republicans.
    • As his Roush Racing teammates had banner seasons, Jeff Burton continued to slide.
    • The offense still is one of the league's best with WRs Ed McCaffrey and Rod Smith having banner seasons.
    • But even in that banner year, Apple's creative energy hasn't amounted to very much in financial terms.
    • Now that Gonzalez has rejected the Yankees, perhaps he can concentrate on turning a disappointing season into another banner year.
    • The decade had two true banner years, at its beginning and its midpoint.
    • Different types of oranges have good years and bad years, L' Hoste says, adding that one banner crop is typically balanced by a sluggish one.
    • Last year was another banner year for the U.S. motorcycle market, which continues to enjoy growth across the board.
    • The shouts went up from men who'd already seen Mathian's banner fall, and panic spread out from them like pestilence.
    • His Noodles & Co. restaurant chain has had another banner year, and he's reaped some rewards from the down economy.
    • Stunningly, while their founder and guiding spirit has been sidelined, Graves's firms have had banner years.
    • It has been another banner year for baseball's most storied, hated franchise.
    • To be sure, and despite some close calls, it was another banner year for Wall Street Structured Finance.

Origin

Middle English: from Old French baniere, ultimately of Germanic origin and related to band.

 
 
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