boycott

ಬಹಿಷ್ಕಾರ
definition
verb
The Israeli academic establishment boycotted him.
withdraw from commercial or social relations with (a country, organization, or person) as a punishment or protest.
noun
Two Australian wool bodies have approached the boycott in very different ways.
a punitive ban that forbids relations with certain groups, cooperation with a policy, or the handling of goods.
translation of 'boycott'
ಬಹಿಷ್ಕರಿಸು
example
most parties indicated that they would 'boycott' the election
we will 'boycott' all banks which take part in the loans scheme
But there was not a great enough turnout under the NUT's own rules to sanction a 'boycott' .
The movement to 'boycott' Japanese goods began in the United States in August 1937.
The Preston-based Captive Animals' Protection Society urged the public to 'boycott' the show being staged on Cronkeyshaw Common.
We need to 'boycott' these companies before it's too late.
Some members have asked why we do not 'boycott' countries such as Sudan or Saudi Arabia that have very bad human rights records.
There have been emails all over the place to 'boycott' US goods.
The Football Supporters Federation are today urging Bantams fans to 'boycott' Saturday's clash with Wimbledon.
Union branches up and down the country held meetings attended by unusually large numbers of members and submitted resolutions calling for the 'boycott' to be dropped.
Turkish threats to 'boycott' German goods also caused widespread anger.
I'd love to 'boycott' the US because of it but I have family I'm visiting for Christmas.
So they will 'boycott' goods in the supermarket that they don't think are ethically sound, or they will seek out particular products and buy them if they think they are ethically sound.
an advert urges consumers to 'boycott' the firm's coffee
One reason is that permissive societies that realized that crime does pay did not 'boycott' people who lived a life of misdemeanour and wrongdoing.
The union has threatened to call for solidarity actions by its members at all sister newspapers and a 'boycott' of all Media 24 newspapers if its demands are not met.
Our call for a 'boycott' is not based on the belief that socialists, in general and in all cases, must refuse to participate in bourgeois elections.
But some veterans who fought in the Far East believe it is a snub to them and say they will 'boycott' the official event.
The European Union quickly imposed sanctions on Austria, and numerous private organizations and individuals began to 'boycott' the country.
Most opposition parties chose to 'boycott' these elections, ensuring a landslide victory for the EPRDF.
Efforts to convince the security staff proved futile and at one stage the media threatened to 'boycott' the prime minister's visit.
I was reading a similar article the other day about how Germans are trying to 'boycott' American goods, as they see it as the only way to get America's attention.
A call to 'boycott' US goods from drink to meals, from cars to sports wear, would hit corporate America where it hurts.
The 'boycott' by the Democratic state senators repeats the tactic employed by Democratic members of the lower house who left Texas as a group three months ago.
Although some angry citizens 'boycott' U.S. products, the U.S. has made it too expensive for the everyday Jamaican consumer.
The Hindu leader also urged the people of Assam to 'boycott' Muslim immigrants economically.
Tonga and Samoa have threatened to 'boycott' the next World Cup unless they receive a better deal.
They could not overcome the effects of the US 'boycott' and the lack of any popular democracy or mass participation in the organisation of society, an essential feature of any socialist revolution.
There is the tendency to 'boycott' US goods throughout the region.
Sport has always been used as a means of enforcing a political viewpoint, whether it is to 'boycott' a country or whether it is to establish diplomatic relations.
Credits: Google Translate