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- Dictionarywalkout/ˈwɔːkaʊt/
noun
- 1. a sudden angry departure, especially as a protest or strike: "opposition MPs staged a walkout during the budget session"
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the act of leaving a place to show that you are unhappy, or (of workers) the act of stopping work because of a disagreement with management: Some people who were unhappy with the changes staged a walkout during the meeting. The airline barely averted a walkout by flight attendants this past June.
- English (US)
the act of leaving a place to show that you are unhappy, or...
- Znaczenie Walkout, Definicja W Cambridge English Dictionary
WALKOUT definicja: 1. the act of leaving an official meeting...
- Walking Papers
WALKING PAPERS definition: 1. If you give someone their...
- Portuguese Translation
WALKOUT translate: greve, retirada. Learn more in the...
- Cambridge English Dictionary에서의 의미
WALKOUT 의미, 정의, WALKOUT의 정의: 1. the act of leaving an...
- Pronunciation in English
walkout pronunciation. How to say walkout. Listen to the...
- Walkthrough
WALKTHROUGH definition: 1. an occasion when you practise...
- Sympathy
SYMPATHY definition: 1. (an expression of) understanding and...
- English (US)
1. : to leave suddenly often as an expression of disapproval. 2. : to go on strike. Phrases. walk out on. : to leave in the lurch : abandon, desert. Synonyms. Noun. strike. Verb.
to leave an event such as a meeting or performance because you are angry or disapprove of something: walk out (of) All the parents walked out (of the meeting) in protest. to suddenly leave your husband, wife, or partner and end your relationship with them:
the act of leaving a place to show that you are unhappy, or (of workers) the act of stopping work because of a disagreement with management: Some people who were unhappy with the changes staged a walkout during the meeting. The airline barely averted a walkout by flight attendants this past June.
the act of leaving or being absent from a meeting, especially as an expression of protest. a doorway in a building or room that gives direct access to the outdoors: a home with a sliding-glass walkout from the living room to the patio.
noun. 1. industrial relations. a strike. 2. the act or an instance of some or all of the people attending a meeting leaving it in order to show their disapproval of something that has happened at the meeting. The commission's proceedings have been wrecked by tantrums and walkouts. Collins English Dictionary.
When workers protest wages or working conditions by leaving their workplace together, it's called a walkout. Sometimes students stage walkouts, refusing to attend classes, to demonstrate their disapproval with school policies.