walkouts

英 [ˈwɔːkˈaʊts] 美 [ˈwɔˌkaʊts]

n.  (突然的)罢工; (为表示抗议而突然的)退场,退席
walkout的复数



柯林斯词典

  1. 罢工
    A walkout is a strike.
    1. N-COUNT (会议上表示反对的)离席,退场
      If there is a walkout during a meeting, some or all of the people attending it leave in order to show their disapproval of something that has happened at the meeting.
      1. The commission's proceedings have been wrecked by tantrums and walkouts.
        委员会的议程因与会者的撒泼捣乱和离席抗议而受阻。

    双语例句

    1. The commission's proceedings have been wrecked by tantrums and walkouts.
      委员会的议程因与会者的撒泼捣乱和离席抗议而受阻。
    2. Since then, the walkouts have expanded across the country and joined with a broader movement to increase pay for low-wage employees of retail chains and federal contractors, among others.
      从那时起,罢工运动席卷全美,规模逐渐扩大,要求为在零售连锁店、联邦承包项目工作的低收入人群增加薪水。
    3. Chinese labour unrest is being replicated in south-east Asia where factories that compete with China to supply low-cost goods are facing walkouts as employees demand better pay and benefits.
      中国劳资纠纷正在东南亚得到复制,一些与中国竞争、供应低成本商品的工厂,正面临雇员停工。这些雇员要求得到更好的薪酬和福利。
    4. The drama and the walkouts are part of the show: in all likelihood a deal of some sort will still be struck before the August 2 deadline.
      这一戏剧性冲突和数名共和党议员退出谈判,只不过是这出戏的一部分:两党在8月2日的最后期限之前仍有很大可能达成某种协议。
    5. A while ago I invested in a service business, only to suffer a series of walkouts across several offices all defecting to a direct rival.
      不久前,我投资了一家服务业公司,令我苦恼的是几个部门的一些员工相继反水,都投入了一家直接竞争对手公司的怀抱。