boycott

US: /ˈbɔɪˌkɑt/
UK: /bˈɔ‍ɪkɒt/


English Vietnamese dictionary


boycott /'bɔikət/
  • danh từ
    • sự tẩy chay
    • ngoại động từ
      • tẩy chay

    Advanced English dictionary


    verb, noun
    + verb [VN] to refuse to buy, use or take part in sth as a way of protesting: We are asking people to boycott goods from companies that use child labour.
    + noun
    ~ (of / on sth) an act of boycotting sb/sth: a trade boycott of British goods + a boycott on the use of tropical wood

    Thesaurus dictionary


    v.
    1 blacklist, embargo; avoid, refuse, shun, reject, eschew, pass over or by:
    They are boycotting Fern's Dairy because it won't hire women. The US government is still boycotting cigars from Havana.
    n.
    2 embargo, blacklist, blacklisting, ban:
    A boycott of their products soon forced them to change their policies.

    Collocation dictionary


    ADJ.

    mass, total, worldwide | consumer, economic, trade
    a consumer boycott of GM foods

    VERB + BOYCOTT

    declare, impose, introduce
    Opposition groups declared a boycott of the elections.
    | call for, threaten
    Lawyers threatened a boycott of the courts.
    | end, lift
    Politicians want to end their boycott of the talks.
    | join
    There is pressure on the biggest union to join the boycott.

    BOYCOTT + NOUN

    campaign

    PREP.

    ~ by
    a boycott by international singers
    | ~ of
    The group is calling for a mass consumer boycott of these products.
    | ~ on
    The US has imposed a boycott on some European goods.

    ADV.

    officially

    VERB + BOYCOTT

    threaten to | call on sb to, urge sb to
    They have urged people to boycott foreign products.


    Concise English dictionary


    boycotts|boycotted|boycotting'bɔɪkət
    noun
    +a group's refusal to have commercial dealings with some organization in protest against its policies
    verb
    +refuse to sponsor; refuse to do business with