Many people live in free countries so they have the right to protest. Street protests allow lots of people to come together and march to make their point, whatever that may be. It also gets their cause a lot of public attention and sometimes can cause a change in policies and so their protests can be successful.
You can if you do not interfere with traffic and no police officer tells you to get off the street. This is more likely to happen in a small town.
Just like how other people protest.
September 17th
A protest rally is when people come together and protest about a common cause.
a 13 year old should have the right to protest its part of the 10 admenents that make our counrty how it s today if you are going to protest on the street then you need a primit in order to voice your oipnoins out in public also you have to protest peacfully
People come together and "protest" fight for there rights against the government or at jobs.
It's called the Occupy Wall Street protest.
People can protest in a dictatorship in the same way that they would protest any other form of government. Typically, a dictatorship has stricter laws prohibiting various types of protest, and therefore protesters would have to violate the law.
Objectors, dissidents, rebels, disapprovers, demonstrators, or separatists are people who protest against something.
The Occupy Wall Street movement began in 2011 as a protest against economic inequality and the perceived influence of corporations on government policies. Participants criticized Wall Street for prioritizing profits over people and called for greater accountability and fairness in the financial system.
Yes they did use social network sites to ask people to protest.
The First Amendment allows people to publicly demonstrate or protest what they want to apply.
The nouns in the sentence, people and hall, are both concrete nouns. There are no abstract nouns in the sentence. The use of the word 'protest' is the trick. As a noun, protest is an abstract noun, but in your sentence it is the verb form 'to protest', not a noun.