boycott
To ensure that colonists observed the boycott of British goods
A boycott is a voluntary abstention from using or buying goods or services, often as a form of protest. A repeal, on the other hand, is the removal or reversal of a law, rule, or regulation. While a boycott is a form of protest, a repeal is a legal action taken to cancel existing legislation.
A boycott is a form of consumer activism involving the act of voluntarily abstaining from using, buying, or dealing with someone or some other organization as an expression of protest.
The main boycott was on 1st April 1933 with stormtroopers standing outside Jewish-owned shops. It was not particularly successful and was not repeated in that form.
Nonimportation Agreements
To ensure that colonists observed the boycott of British goods
A metaphor for boycott could be a "silent protest" where individuals or groups choose to abstain from participating in or supporting certain activities or products as a form of expressing their disapproval or dissent.
The name of the bus boycott was the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
Violence against the boycott leader Arrest of the boycott leader Appeal of a federal court decision supporting the boycott
To ensure that colonists observed the boycott of British goods
To ensure that colonists observed the boycott of British goods.