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Wonderful school festival / cultural festival

Recommended Slogans for Junior High School Cultural Festivals | Carefully Selected Four-Character Idioms and Famous Quotes!

At junior high school cultural festivals, isn’t it common to have a different slogan each year?

A wide range of ideas usually come up as candidates, from classic four-character idioms and famous quotes to humorous phrases that incorporate current buzzwords.

However, when it’s time to actually discuss and decide, many schools probably struggle to settle on one every year.

In this article, we’ll introduce recommended slogans for junior high school cultural festivals.

We’ve focused on simple, relatable options for students as well as ideas that reflect current trends, so please use them as a reference.

Recommended Slogans for Junior High School Cultural Festivals | Carefully Selected Four-Character Idioms and Famous Quotes! (21–30)

Stay true to your original intention.

[Keeping One's Original Intent] Meaning and Example Sentences of the Four-Character Idiom @KeroKero Dictionary ◆ 1 Minute in a Video! Easy to Remember♪
Stay true to your original intention.

Shoshi-Kantetsu is a four-character idiom meaning to carry out the goals or intentions you first set all the way to the end.

Adopting it as a New Year’s resolution can change your daily mindset.

For example, if you decide, in studies or sports, “This is what I’ll work hard on this year,” it’s important to keep at it steadily without giving up halfway.

Even if things don’t go well along the way, recalling your original resolve will help you find the will to try again.

Accumulating small efforts day by day is the practice of Shoshi-Kantetsu, and it is a phrase that fosters the strength to achieve your goals.

radiance

radiance

“KAGAYAKI” (Radiance/Brilliance) is a simple yet impactful word—perfect as a slogan.

Shining students, shining booths, shining stages—the cultural festival is filled with all kinds of shine.

Each person’s brilliance comes together to create a greater radiance for the festival, making it a joyful day.

It may be just a single character, but printing it on posters, banners, or class T-shirts will leave a strong impression and surely boost students’ efforts.

Be sure to make good use of it!

Recommended Slogans for Junior High School Cultural Festivals | Carefully Selected Four-Character Idioms and Famous Quotes! (31–40)

Ephemeral as a bubble; an illusion like a dream

Ephemeral as a bubble; an illusion like a dream

This four-character idiom originates from the final passage of the Buddhist Diamond Sutra and refers to things that, like dreams, illusions, bubbles, or shadows, lack substance and vanish quickly.

Taken paradoxically, it also carries the meaning that precisely because of this, we should live the present moment to the fullest.

Nothing about human beings—or anything else—is infinite, but this expression teaches the importance of making each fleeting moment fulfilling.

It may be worthwhile to reflect deeply on why we live and where we are headed.

fiery and high-spirited; brimming with passionate enthusiasm

fiery and high-spirited; brimming with passionate enthusiasm

Kien Banjō (literally “flames soaring high”) expresses an intensely burning passion, as if flames are leaping upward.

Many junior high school students tackling their cultural festival surely carry such fiery enthusiasm.

This phrase captures that heat and lets you declare, “We’re creating this festival with this much powerful passion.” Why not raise this fervent, inspiring phrase as your slogan to show how wholeheartedly the students are striving toward their goals? Visiting parents and others will surely feel the students’ hard work.

Nothing beats the 〇〇 Festival!

Nothing beats the 〇〇 Festival!

In recent years, the phrase “Only ___ wins” has become popular on social media.

It’s a way to show what you’re really into.

For example, you can put the name of your favorite idol or your favorite food in the blank.

It’s a unique and cute way to express yourself, isn’t it? How about using that as a motif and going with “Only ___ Festival wins”? That way, you can express that “this festival is the most fun.” You could also put your class name in the blank.

omniscient and omnipotent

omniscient and omnipotent

Omniscience and omnipotence—a godlike ability that means knowing everything and being able to do anything.

We’re not gods, so we can’t literally do everything.

But if we approach the school festival with a positive mindset, believing we can do anything, a lot of things might go well.

Worried about whether people will come or enjoy themselves? Anxious about making mistakes? This phrase can turn those worries and anxieties into a feeling of “It’ll be okay.” Why not use this phrase as a slogan to rally ourselves?

The one who has the most fun wins!

The one who has the most fun wins!

There’s a long-cherished slogan that says, “Those who have fun win.” As the phrase suggests, it means, “In any case, you should just enjoy yourself.” Many of you may be carrying various worries, but at the culture festival, free yourself from stress and spread your wings to the fullest.

By the way, it’s said that the original source of this phrase might be Rousseau’s words: “The person who has lived the most is the one who has enjoyed life the most.” Such profoundly meaningful words truly resonate.