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Pinyin of slogans

Pinyin of the slogan: kǒ u hà o. The slogan is "a short sentence with a programmatic and enlightening oral cry". Marxist philosophy holds that matter determines consciousness, and consciousness has a dynamic role in matter. Slogans, as one of the manifestations of consciousness, are the reflection of social politics, economy and culture at that time, and different slogans play different roles.

From "Notes on Swallows in Lushui: Gao Yi" by Wang Bizhi in Song Dynasty: "In this article, the husband and wife make slogans, and there is a saying,' There are three bachelor's degrees in Golden Horse and Jade Hall, and two idlers in the breeze and bright moon', which is spread all over the world."

Slogan sentence:

1, your slogan is fair competition, and what you hate is breaking the rules.

Seeing that everyone was so United, he cried while shouting slogans.

3. Liverpool's slogan is somewhat different: the last battle.

At the end of the speech, he shouted the slogan "Kill the thief to save the country", which excited the audience.