1. placard - Noun
2. placard - Verb
A public proclamation; a manifesto or edict issued by authority.
Permission given by authority; a license; as, to give a placard to do something.
A written or printed paper, as an advertisement or a declaration, posted, or to be posted, in a public place; a poster.
An extra plate on the lower part of the breastplate or backplate.
A kind of stomacher, often adorned with jewels, worn in the fifteenth century and later.
To post placards upon or within; as, to placard a wall, to placard the city.
To announce by placards; as, to placard a sale.
Source: Webster's dictionarya poster advertised the coming attractions Source: Internet
According to a descriptive placard provided for tourists there, "The property remained in the ownership of Shakespeare's direct descendants until 1670, when his granddaughter, Elizabeth Barnard, died. Source: Internet
A girl carries a placard reading "Special Ant-Robbery Squad (SARS) Kill, SARS Rape, SARS Extort, End SARS Now" on the road to a government house in Ikeja, on Oct. 9, 2020. Source: Internet
At the bottom of the steps is a placard showing what the square looked like in 1929 The heyday of Potsdamer Platz was in the 1920s and 1930s. Source: Internet
In 2006 the Stade police department started an inquiry against anti-fascist youths using a placard depicting a person dumping a swastika into a trashcan. Source: Internet
BEIRUT, Lebanon — The Islamic State militant, his AK-47 cradled between his legs, crouched next to the driver in the front of the bus, near a placard in the windshield that read B-9, which stood for bus No. 9 out of 17. Source: Internet