boycott 的 2 个定义
- to combine in abstaining from, or preventing dealings with, as a means of intimidation or coercion: to boycott a store.
- to abstain from buying or using: to boycott foreign products.
- the practice of boycotting.
- an instance of boycotting.
boycott 近义词
ban; refrain from using
更多boycott例句
- The company was the first high-profile advertisers to join the boycott — and now one of the first to announce its return.
- It also appears Facebook won’t need to make many of the concessions boycott organizers wanted.
- In some cases, publishers have been able to draw a direct connection between the Facebook video ad revenue decline and the advertiser boycott.
- Boycott or no boycott the biggest Facebook advertisers were always going to spend less on the platform in 2020.
- When he met with leaders of the boycott, he stuck to familiar talking points.
- Unless Cuba sends them back, you might consider following the now lifted embargo with your own personal boycott.
- The Black Friday demonstrations were part of a nation wide boycott and mass action to bring awareness to Ferguson.
- Those rumors, in turn, sparked a boycott of enterprises affiliated with the family.
- The conservative Christian group mailed out nearly one million cards to supporters calling on them to boycott Disney products.
- The 1996 filing (which you can check out here) was, naturally, as silly and frivolous as the boycott push that came before it.
- There is hot talk of a boycott to be extended to everything sold or handled by the Hatch syndicate.
- Another common word taken at first from politics, but now used in a general sense, is boycott.
- That was a secondary boycott, which Mr. Cleveland said ought to be suppressed.
- As soon as opposition developed the Ku Klux “freedom of the press” manifested itself in a desire to boycott the newspaper.
- It is generally used in English as a verb of which the nearest equivalent is another curious verb—to boycott.