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Recommended slogans for a high school cultural festival: A roundup of school festival themes

The cultural festival slogan is an important element that symbolizes that year’s festival.

You probably want a slogan that reflects the image of the festival that year—something like “We want students to feel a sense of unity,” “We want it to capture the spirit of youth,” or “It should be humorous and fun,” and so on.

In this article, we’ll introduce recommended slogan ideas.

Since these suggestions are geared toward high school students, we’ve included not only trendy ideas but also four-character idioms with beautiful meanings that you don’t hear every day, as well as longer English phrases.

Use this as a reference when choosing your slogan!

Recommended slogans for high school cultural festivals: A collection of festival themes (41–50)

Forge ahead with courage

Forge ahead with courage

The Japanese phrase “yūō maishin” (勇往邁進) means to charge straight ahead toward your goals without fear.

From preparations leading up to the day, to running the stalls and stage on the day itself, and even through cleanup, it’s a phrase that truly rallies hardworking high school students.

Just seeing the words on a poster or banner is sure to fire you up to say, “Let’s do our best!” Even if various worries come at you, it’s a slogan that helps everyone feel strong: face them head-on with everything you’ve got and follow through the way you want to!

Recommended slogans for high school cultural festivals. A collection of themes for school festivals (51–60)

Impossible is nothing

The phrase “Impossible is nothing,” made famous as words spoken by American boxer Muhammad Ali, was written for an Adidas advertisement.

In that ad, there was also a line before it that read “Impossible is 〇〇.” A literal translation would be “There’s no such thing as impossible,” but when you read the full text of the ad, you realize it carries the nuance that “the word ‘impossible’ is nothing more than an excuse.” It’s a perfect message for a school culture festival—a place where people believe in their potential and express themselves in various ways.

cherry, plum, peach, and apricot (each flower/thing has its own unique beauty)

Ōbai-tōri is pronounced “ōbai tōri.” It literally refers to cherry, plum, peach, and Japanese plum (prunus mume and prunus salicina), each blooming with its own distinct flowers, and by extension means that everyone should express their unique individuality.

Put simply, ōbai-tōri conveys that “it’s important to make the most of one’s individuality.” Using this four-character idiom as a slogan enhances its visual impact when written, and its pleasing sound makes it motivating to say out loud, too.

In conclusion

We introduced recommended slogans for high school cultural festivals.

Some were a bit challenging, like rarely used four-character idioms and famous English quotes, but they all had wonderful meanings that can truly capture your feelings for the festival.

We hope that the cultural festival you create, together with the slogan you choose based on this article, will become an unforgettable memory.