sympathy strike — ➔ strike1 * * * sympathy strike UK US noun [C] HR, WORKPLACE ► a situation where workers stop working to show their support for a group of workers who are on strike … Financial and business terms
sympathy strike — see strike Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
sympathy strike — n. a strike by a group of workers in support of another group on strike … English World dictionary
sympathy strike — sympathy ,strike noun count an occasion when workers stop working as a protest to show their support for another group of workers who have gone on STRIKE … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
sympathy strike — noun a strike in support of other workers who are on strike; a strike not resulting from direct grievances against the workers employer • Syn: ↑sympathetic strike • Hypernyms: ↑strike, ↑work stoppage * * * noun : sympathetic strike * * * … Useful english dictionary
Sympathy strike — A sympathy strike is a strike action that is initiated by workers in one industry and supported by workers in a separate but related industry or profession. Sympathy strikes are also called sympathy action, secondary strikes and secondary… … Wikipedia
sympathy strike — UK / US noun [countable] Word forms sympathy strike : singular sympathy strike plural sympathy strikes an occasion when workers stop working as a protest to show their support for another group of workers who have gone on strike … English dictionary
sympathy strike — noun Date: 1912 a strike in which the strikers have no direct grievance against their own employer but attempt to support or aid usually another group of workers on strike … New Collegiate Dictionary
sympathy strike — sym′pathy strike n. bus a strike by workers who have no grievance but wish to show solidarity with another group of striking or locked out workers • Etymology: 1900–05 … From formal English to slang
sympathy strike — /ˈsɪmpəθi straɪk/ (say simpuhthee struyk) noun a strike by a body of workers, not because of grievances against their own employer, but by way of endorsing and aiding another body of workers who are on strike or have been locked out …