Refuse to sponsor; refuse to do business with.
Act of voluntarily abstaining from using, buying, or dealing with a person, organization, or country.
1 Imagine the impact of a similar such boycott across the Irish Sea.
2 Publicly, state media called for a boycott of all things South Korean.
3 The oil-producer held elections a month ago, marred by an opposition boycott .
4 Many opposition parties say they will boycott the elections called by Mursi.
5 Early Monday morning, he publicly advocated a boycott on all Sony products.
6 Both NGOs are among a group that plans to boycott the law.
7 Thailand held elections on Sunday despite a boycott from the opposition party.
8 There's a movement in Australia to boycott Bali as a holiday situation.
9 A boycott would damage the credibility of the vote and prolong uncertainty.
10 But there was little doubt about the outcome given the opposition boycott .
11 In December of that year, the Montgomery bus boycott began in Alabama.
12 Such a boycott is taken extremely seriously in the devoutly Buddhist country.
13 The bloc decided at a meeting on Wednesday to continue the boycott .
14 Threat level readers have written in to say they will boycott Regal.
15 In addition, the station was received boycott threats from local Leno fans.
16 Do professors with academic freedom have the right to boycott a publisher?
Другие примеры для термина "boycott"
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Об этом термине Глагол
Изъявительное наклонение · Настоящее