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sit-down strike
noun
- a strike during which workers occupy their place of employment and refuse to work or allow others to work until the strike is settled.
sit-down strike
noun
- a strike in which workers refuse to leave their place of employment until a settlement is reached
Word History and Origins
Origin of sit-down strike1
Example Sentences
She staged a sit-down strike at a segregated roller skating rink in Cambridge, Mass., when she was 14, and she later broke ground as a Black woman in education, employment and housing.
When the elevator breaks down yet again and Isaac can’t get to an exam on the upper floor, the whole school stages a sit-down strike in his support.
There was actually a direct connection to the famous sit-down strike in Flint, Michigan, in 1936.
Roosevelt refused to take a strong stand against the "sit-down strike," a controversial labor tactic that posed a direct challenge to major industrial employers.
Kildee’s congressional district includes the city of Flint, where a sit-down strike by General Motors workers in 1936-1937 brought about one of the biggest victories for labor unions in America’s history.
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