A phrase that has become a catchword.
Phrase or expression recognized by its repeated utterance.
1 He's got that catch phrase that we don't know right now.
2 The problem of a human politics is not solved by a catch phrase .
3 In its place they proffered a new catch phrase : "the growth recession".
4 That's been a catch phrase for years among space enthusiasts.
5 It is a catch phrase , made famous by Mahan and glibly used ever since.
6 I'm just trying to work up a catch phrase .
7 Indeed, "And much more..." is sort of the catch phrase of Comic Rack.
8 But the catch phrase , 'Military- Intelligence,' a contradiction in terms' made their job doubly difficult.
9 This was a catch phrase of his: "the idea is."
10 That's the thing, we had this catch phrase , every week in season one, did the President call.
11 Economic equality is often summed up in the catch phrase "equal pay for equal work."
12 Their advantage lies in the opportunity for illustration and an outside design or catch phrase to win attention.
13 One correspondent calls his catch phrase "regretfully hollow".
14 In a society modelled on open source ideals, 'think globally, act locally' becomes more than just a catch phrase .
15 In December 2013 the IRFU distributed a guide to educate players, coaches and parents with the catch phrase Recognise and Remove.
16 While my sons are still taken with Thumpback's "Hail to the whale" catch phrase and skid around the house shouting it.
Other examples for "catch phrase"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Translations for catch phrase