picket
noun /ˈpɪkɪt/
/ˈpɪkɪt/
- a person or group of people who stand outside the entrance to a building in order to protest about something, especially in order to stop people from entering a factory, etc. during a strike; an occasion at which this happens
- Five pickets were arrested by police.
- I was on picket duty at the time.
- a mass picket of the factory
Wordfinder- ballot
- closed shop
- collective bargaining
- industrial action
- labour
- picket
- protest
- representative
- strike
- union
Extra ExamplesTopics Social issuesc2, Working lifec2- They organized a mass picket of the governor's palace.
- angry people with picket signs
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- mass
- flying
- organize
- duty
- line
- sign
- …
- a soldier or group of soldiers guarding a military baseTopics War and conflictc2
- a pointed piece of wood that is fixed in the ground, especially as part of a fence
- a picket fence
Word Originlate 17th cent. (denoting a pointed stake, on which a soldier was required to stand on one foot as a military punishment): from French piquet ‘pointed stake’, from piquer ‘to prick’, from pic ‘pike’.