English to Arabic Dictionary placard

placard

لافتة
definition
verb
they were placarding the town with posters
cover with placards.
noun
The article says that his followers already have the placards for the demonstrations printed up and stored for use.
a poster or sign for public display, either fixed to a wall or carried during a demonstration.
translation of 'placard'
verb
أعلن عن,
علق إعلانا
noun
لافتة,
لوحة إعلانية,
إعلان
example
This positive value was most eloquently summed up in a 'placard' carried by a pregnant demonstrator in New York City on February 15th, 2003.
Instead, anyone who wants to take part carries on with their normal day, but carries a 'placard' or banner while out and about.
Similarly, a 'placard' carrying a message on road safety has been displayed at the Time Keeper's office in every depot.
One demonstrator even carried a 'placard' saying ‘Self employed worker on strike’.
They come to a 'placard' mounted on the wall, displaying a map of the Palace's three floors.
Pesticide storage areas should be 'placarded' and locked away from children, irresponsible adults and animals.
The manufactures and certification bodies cannot be blamed for failures that occur outside the 'placarded' limits of our gliders!
Quite apart from his agents, who are everywhere, the country is 'placarded' with his portraits in a variety of roles.
Mechanics 'placarded' the autopilot as inoperative, though they did not pull or safety the circuit breaker.
While many important airspeeds are on the airspeed indicator or 'placarded' nearby, there's one speed many pilots forget to pay attention to: Vg (best glide).
The protestors were carrying banners and 'placards' and they were raising slogans against the government and the security forces.
Famously, this film was banned in Swansea but not in Cardiff, so busloads of eager Welsh heathen were transported daily betwixt the two heaving metropolises to watch it, then 'placarded' on their return.
Students painted their bodies with slogans or carried hand-written 'placards' condemning the drive to war.
Protesters carried banners and 'placards' denouncing the move.
Pilots were instructed to observe 'placarded' dive speeds and angles and to watch for nose-heaviness and buffeting which were the first indications of compressibility.
It was a schoolroom by day and on each of the four walls there were 'placards' on which were written the four main verbs: do, make, say and think.
The article says that his followers already have the 'placards' for the demonstrations printed up and stored for use.
When I went through the Brandenburg Gate, it was scaffolded and shrouded and 'placarded' and jackhammered, and I had to push through a countercurrent of girls parading their lovely selves through a temporary narrow passage of plywood.
We have thrown all our resources into ensuring posters, 'placards' and stickers carrying the anti-war message are out across Britain.
Teachers carried banners and 'placards' calling for the right to organise and to strike.
Under constraint of time and the non-availability of the appropriate placards, the contractor decided to transport the explosives without properly 'placarding' their vehicle, a direct violation of safety standards.
Perhaps, some day, his own name might be 'placarded' on the walls of London.
The extended nose includes a 20-cu-ft baggage compartment that, like the existing 22-cu-ft rear baggage compartment, is 'placarded' for 200 lb.
But no one in authority seems to care, and one of these days, you may find on our lunch hour, teachers are 'placarding' the Tarouba Road out of frustration.
The workers waved 'placards' during an hour-long public demonstration in the central city, and will continue doing so twice a week.
The Metro stations are tidy, the advertising 'placards' on the walls are artistic and very French.
Each person was forced to sign an agreement not to carry 'placards' or banners, shout slogans, or wear clothes with written words of complaint.
The students carried 'placards' and posters on water conservation.
There were one or two pro-hunting demonstrators carrying 'placards' saying polls showed a majority in favour of hunting.
Fear of the disease then justified measures ranging from 'placarding' houses to forced isolation of patients in special institutions.
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