poster child in English

noun
1
a person or thing that epitomizes or represents a specified quality, cause, etc..
the organization is the poster child for bad business deals

Use "poster child" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "poster child" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "poster child", or refer to the context using the word "poster child" in the English Dictionary.

1. Centering things in CSS is the poster child of CSS complaining

2. "Axle Payments is the poster child factoring company for any freight brokerage

3. By 2010, Detroit had become the poster child for an American city in crisis.

4. Cambridge Analytica may have been the perfect poster child for how data can be misused

5. You've been poking around about Brody ever since he became the poster child for D.O.D.

6. The Canvasback became the poster child for the movement to ban market hunting in the early 1900s

7. In modern times, the Bobolink serves as an iconic species of North American grasslands, a poster child for the plight and conservation of grassland birds.

8. The Chaser is an expert serial-killer film from South Korea and a poster child for what a well-made thriller looked like in the classic days

9. This is why the “poster child” district for non-Compactness, Virginia House of Delegates District 72, scored a paltry .26 on Reock and .08 on Polsby-Popper

10. Boxwood The poster child for traditional formal gardens, Boxwood has seen its ups and downs in popularity over the years, but it always seems to bounce back

11. — Joshua Hammer, Smithsonian, February 2008 Turmeric is a poster child for one of the most noted intellectual-property cases on Biopiracy, which pitted an Indian government-supported research organization against a 1995 patent issued to the University of Mississippi for the use of the spice for wound healing.

12. ‘The Bocaccio is the ‘poster child’ for an overfished species, currently estimated to be 2-4% of their original biomass.’ ‘Vast numbers of rockfish at various life stages, especially widows, yellowtails, and blues, which tend to school in midwater, and some deeper-water species such as yelloweyes, canaries, vermilions, and Bocaccios