boykot et

listen to the pronunciation of boykot et
Turkish - English
{f} boycott

You boycotted merchandise from that country. - Sen o ülkenin ürünlerini boykot ettin.

We have to boycott them. - Onları boykot etmek zorundayız.

To abstain, either as an individual or group, from using, buying, or dealing with someone or some organization as an expression of protest
to place the products or merchandise of under a ban
The practice of urging union members and the public at large not to buy a particular company's products or services
An organized refusal to buy, sell, or associate with a person, business, or nation Designed to force policy changes through economic and social pressure For example, a group organized together can refuse to buy the products of a certain company hoping to bring about a change in its unfair treatment of its workers
to avoid purchasing goods from a company or country
an agreement between two or more parties to not do business with a third party A boycott usually takes the form of a union and its members applying pressure on an employer to change some business practice
To abstain from using, buying, or dealing with a person, firm, or country to express protest or to coerce
n act or instance of refusing to buy, sell, or use
a condition that a group of people refuse to buy certain goods or services to influence a government or a business to make change
{i} ban, embargo, refusal to purchase or use a product
a group's refusal to have commercial dealings with some organization in protest against its policies refuse to sponsor; refuse to do business with
An unfair trade practice which occurs when someone in the insurance business refuses to have business dealings with another until he or she complies with certain conditions or concessions (G)
an attempt to keep people from purchasing the products of a company
a group's refusal to have commercial dealings with some organization in protest against its policies
social and business interdiction for the purpose of coercion
– concerted action of employees an their union to refrain from working with the establishment
Another practice defined as "unfair" under most states' codes Such a practice which occurs when someone in the insurance business refuses to do business with someone else until that person complies with certain conditions or concessions
The act of boycotting
If a country, group, or person boycotts a country, organization, or activity, they refuse to be involved with it in any way because they disapprove of it. The main opposition parties are boycotting the elections. Boycott is also a noun. Opposition leaders had called for a boycott of the vote. to refuse to buy something, use something, or take part in something as a way of protesting (Charles Boycott (1832-97), English official in Ireland who refused to reduce rents, so the local people refused to do any business with him). an act of boycotting something, or the period of time when it is boycotted. Collective and organized ostracism applied in labour, economic, political, or social relations to protest and punish practices considered unfair. The tactic was popularized by Charles Stewart Parnell to protest high rents and land evictions in Ireland in 1880 by the estate manager Charles C. Boycott (b. 1832 d. 1897). Boycotts are principally used by labour organizations to win improved wages and working conditions or by consumers to pressure companies to change their hiring, labour, environmental, or investment practices. U.S. law distinguishes between primary boycotts, which consist of the refusal by employees to purchase the goods or services of their employers, and secondary boycotts, which involve attempts to induce third parties to refuse to patronize the employer. The latter type of boycott is illegal in most states. Boycotts were used as a tactic in the U.S. civil rights movement of the 1950s and '60s and also have been applied to influence the conduct of multinational corporations
- concerted action of employees an their union to refrain from working with the establishment
boykot et
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