boycott
英['bɒɪkɒt]
美['bɔɪkɑt]
- vt. 联合抵制;拒绝参加
- n. 联合抵制
- n. (Boycott)人名;(英)博伊科特
词态变化
复数: boycotts;第三人称单数: boycotts;过去式: boycotted;过去分词: boycotted;现在分词: boycotting;
中文词源
boycott 联合抵制
来自19世纪爱尔兰土地代理Charles Boycott的名字。因在1880年这一庄稼欠收年,拒绝答应佃农降租的请求而激起众怒,并遭到所有人的联合抵制,以致于有钱甚至买不到面包,几近于饿死。
英文词源
- boycott
- boycott: [19] The word boycott sprang into general use in the year 1880, to describe the activities of the Irish Land League. This was an organization set up in 1879 by the Irish nationalist Michael Davitt to press for agrarian reforms, rent reductions, etc. Those who did not agree with its aims, it subjected to an organized campaign of ostracism. One of the first to suffer from this was one Captain Charles Cunningham Boycott (1832–97), a British estate manager in County Mayo. Hence ‘to boycott’, which became a buzzword of the early 1880s, was quickly adopted by other European languages, and has remained in current use ever since.
- boycott
- 1880, noun and verb, from Irish Land League ostracism of Capt. Charles C. Boycott (1832-1897), land agent of Lough-Mask in County Mayo, who refused to lower rents for his tenant farmers. Quickly adopted by newspapers in languages as far afield as Japanese (boikotto). The family name is from a place in England.
双语例句
- 1. Opposition leaders had called for a boycott of the vote.
- 反对党领袖已号召人们拒绝投票。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. Rosie Boycott was not involved editorially with Virago.
- 罗西·博伊科特不属于维拉戈出版公司的编辑队伍。
来自柯林斯例句
- 3. We are asking people to boycott goods from companies that use child labour.
- 我们正呼吁大家抵制雇用童工的公司的产品。
来自《权威词典》
- 4. Their boycott of the talks constitutes a serious impediment to peace negotiations.
- 他们联合抵制会谈的行为成了和谈的重大障碍.
来自《简明英汉词典》
- 5. A spokesman says the president has backed off from his threat to boycott the conference.
- 一位发言人表示总统已经收回了他将抵制这次会议的威胁。
来自柯林斯例句