From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbillboardbill‧board /ˈbɪlbɔːd $ -bɔːrd/ noun [countable] TTRBBAa large sign used for advertising SYN hoarding British English► see thesaurus at advertisement
Examples from the Corpus
billboard• Huizenga plans to expand into the areas of electronic security and billboard advertising.• Around the world, some 3 billion pairs of eyes will notice their logos, slogans and billboards.• There are billboards seeking the re-election to the state legislature of Marion Feinstein.• It might even be socialist, and we couldn't have that-bridges and communities might be built before billboards.• Directly behind him was a huge billboard with her picture looming big and brassy back at her.• Whiteco, the billboard company, thought its seven signs on Speedway should be worth $ 3. 2 million.• Other commodities for which memes compete are radio and television time, billboard space, newspaper column-inches, and library shelf-space.BillboardBillboard a US weekly magazine about popular music, that lists the best-selling popular songs, albums, and videosFrom Longman Business Dictionarybillboardbill‧board /ˈbɪlbɔːd-bɔːrd/ noun [countable]MARKETING a large sign used for advertisingSYNhoarding BrEtobacco ads in magazines, newspapers and on billboards