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Uncle Sam
noun
a personification of the government or people of the U.S.: represented as a tall, lean man with white chin whiskers, wearing a blue tailcoat, red-and-white-striped trousers, and a top hat with a band of stars.
Uncle Sam
noun
a personification of the government of the United States
Uncle Sam
A figure who stands for the government of the United States and for the United States itself. Uncle Sam — whose initials are the abbreviation of United States — is portrayed as an old man with a gray goatee who sports a top hat and Stars and Stripes clothing. During World War I and World War II, posters of Uncle Sam exhorted young men to join the armed forces. (Compare John Bull.)
Word History and Origins
Origin of Uncle Sam1
Word History and Origins
Origin of Uncle Sam1
Example Sentences
In it, he wears his finest Uncle Sam garb and points at viewers, issuing a statement: “Kid Rock wants YOU to support Gavin Newsom.”
Social media for the Department of Homeland Security, the department that oversees ICE, is packed with recruitment posts, evoking old “Uncle Sam” and World War II style artwork.
The growing debt pile leaves some to wonder whether there is a limit to how much the rest of the world will lend Uncle Sam.
The Department of Homeland Security, ICE’s parent agency, released a poster on social media this week that depicts Uncle Sam urging people to call a hotline to “report all foreign invaders.”
All that brainpower would have been for naught, however, save for the beneficence of Uncle Sam.
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