Parole in English per 'Synonym of picketer.'
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noun
- (derogatory, slang) A worker who acts against trade union policies; any picket crosser (strikebreaker), and especially one with devotion to union busting.
- (founding) A slight irregular protuberance which defaces the surface of a casting, caused by the breaking away of a part of the mold.
- The mange, especially when it appears on sheep.
- An incrustation over a sore, wound, vesicle, or pustule, formed during healing.
- (phytopathology) Any one of various more or less destructive fungal diseases that attack cultivated plants, forming dark-colored crustlike spots.
- A mean, dirty, paltry fellow.
- (uncountable) Any of several different diseases of potatoes producing pits and other damage on their surface, caused by streptomyces bacteria (but formerly believed to be caused by a fungus).
- Common scab, a relatively harmless variety of scab (potato disease) caused by Streptomyces scabies.
- the crustlike surface of a healing skin lesion
- someone who works (or provides workers) during a strike
verb
- (intransitive) To act as a strikebreaker.
- (intransitive) To form into scabs and be shed, as damaged or diseased skin.
- (transitive, UK, Australia, New Zealand, informal) To beg (for), to cadge or bum.
- (transitive) To remove part of a surface (from).
- (intransitive) To become covered by a scab or scabs.
- form a scab
- take the place of work of someone on strike
noun
- (colloquial, often derogatory) A prominent activist.
- (colloquial, often derogatory) Someone with strong views regarding a political cause.
- (colloquial, often derogatory) A politician.
- (colloquial, often derogatory) Someone involved in the professional life of a politician or a political campaign to varying degrees.
- (colloquial, often derogatory) Someone who follows politics regularly and is knowledgeable about at least the political news in their local area.
- a person active in party politics
noun
adj
verb
- (transitive) To tether to, or as if to, a picket.
- (intransitive) To protest, organized by a labour union, typically in front of the location of employment.
- (transitive) To enclose or fortify with pickets or pointed stakes.
- (transitive) To guard, as a camp or road, by an outlying picket.
- fasten with a picket
- serve as pickets or post pickets
noun
- A protester positioned outside an office, workplace etc. during a strike (usually in plural); also the protest itself.
- (sometimes figurative) A sentry.
- (military) One of the soldiers or troops placed on a line forward of a position to warn against an enemy advance; or any unit (for example, an aircraft or ship) performing a similar function.
- (historical) A type of punishment by which an offender had to rest his or her entire body weight on the top of a small stake.
- A stake driven into the ground.
- (card games, uncountable) The card game piquet.
- A tool in mountaineering that is driven into the snow and used as an anchor or to arrest falls.
- a protester posted by a labor organization outside a place of work
- a detachment of troops guarding an army from surprise attack
- a vehicle performing sentinel duty
- a person employed to keep watch for some anticipated event
- a form of military punishment used by the British in the late 17th century in which a soldier was forced to stand on one foot on a pointed stake
- a wooden strip forming part of a fence
noun
- A word used as a motto, as expressive of a principle, belief, or rule of action; a rallying cry.
- (military, security) A prearranged reply to the challenge of a sentry or a guard; a password or signal by which friends can be known from enemies.
- a secret word or phrase known only to a restricted group
- a slogan used to rally support for a cause
adj
- Working against union policies, working to bust unions; in particular, being a scab (worker who crosses a union picket line).
- (printing) Having a blotched, uneven appearance.
- Injured by the attachment of barnacles to the carapace of a shell.
- Diseased with the scab (mange): mangy.
- Affected with scabs; full of scabs.
- (Ireland, UK, slang) stingy; scrounging.
- covered with scabs
noun
- (derogatory, slang) An environmentalist with socialist leanings, an ecosocialist.
- (colloquial, slang) A breast, especially that of an adult or adolescent female human.
- The fruit of the watermelon plant, having a green rind and watery flesh that is typically bright red when ripe and contains black seeds.
- A project that is presented as on schedule when it actually has parts that are falling behind.
- A pinkish-red colour, like that of watermelon flesh (also called watermelon pink).
- A plant of the species Citrullus lanatus, bearing a melon-like fruit.
- large oblong or roundish melon with a hard green rind and sweet watery red or occasionally yellowish pulp
- an African melon
verb
- (intransitive, slang) To be confrontational.
- (transitive, nautical) To fix the foot of (a mast) in its step; to erect.
- To dance.
- (intransitive) To walk; to go on foot; especially, to walk a little distance.
- (intransitive) To walk slowly, gravely, or resolutely.
- (transitive) To set, as the foot.
- (intransitive, slang, African-American Vernacular) To depart.
- (transitive) To advance a process gradually, one step at a time.
- (intransitive, figuratively) To move mentally; to go in imagination.
- (intransitive) To move the foot in walking; to advance or recede by raising and moving one of the feet to another resting place, or by moving both feet in succession.
- place (a ship's mast) in its step
- put down or press the foot, place the foot
- move with one's feet in a specific manner
- treat badly
- measure (distances) by pacing
- shift or move by taking a step
- walk a short distance to a specified place or in a specified manner
- furnish with steps
- move or proceed as if by steps into a new situation
- cause (a computer) to execute a single command
noun
- (colloquial) A stepchild.
- (glassblowing) The button joining a glass's stem to its foot.
- Stepping (style of dance)
- (machines) One of a series of offsets, or parts, resembling the steps of stairs, as one of the series of parts of a cone pulley on which the belt runs.
- (nautical) A framing in wood or iron which is intended to receive an upright shaft; specifically, a block of wood, or a solid platform upon the keelson, supporting the heel of the mast.
- (in the plural) A walk; passage.
- A distinct part of a process; stage; phase.
- An advance or movement made from one foot to the other; a pace.
- Proceeding; measure; action; act.
- (in the plural) A portable framework of stairs, much used indoors in reaching to a high position.
- The part of a spade, digging stick or similar tool that a digger's foot rests against and presses on when digging; an ear, a foot-rest.
- (kinematics) A change of position effected by a motion of translation.
- (slang, primarily Netherlands) Kick scooter.
- A print of the foot; a footstep; a footprint; track.
- A gait; manner of walking.
- (machines) A bearing in which the lower extremity of a spindle or a vertical shaft revolves.
- The space passed over by one movement of the foot in walking or running.
- A small space or distance.
- (colloquial) A stepsibling.
- A rest, or one of a set of rests, for the foot in ascending or descending, as a stair, or a rung of a ladder.
- A running board where passengers step to get on and off the bus.
- (programming) A constant difference between consecutive values in a series.
- (music) The interval between two contiguous degrees of the scale.
- a sequence of foot movements that make up a particular dance
- a musical interval of two semitones
- the distance covered by a step
- a mark of a foot or shoe on a surface
- relative position in a graded series
- support consisting of a place to rest the foot while ascending or descending a stairway
- any maneuver made as part of progress toward a goal
- the sound of a step of someone walking
- the act of changing location by raising the foot and setting it down
- a short distance
- a solid block joined to the beams in which the heel of a ship's mast or capstan is fixed
noun
- (countable) A proletarian word or turn of phrase; a vulgarism.
- (uncountable, rare) Proletarians regarded as a class; the proletariat.
- (uncountable) The political character and practice of the proletariat; advocacy or advancement of the proletariat’s interests.
- (uncountable) The state, quality, or condition of being a proletarian.
- The condition or political position of a member of the working class.
noun
- (idiomatic, by extension) A young person who agitates for political or other reform; a young person with a rebellious disposition.
- (historical) From the late-19th to the early-20th century, a member of a movement that campaigned for reform of the Ottoman Empire.
- a young radical who agitates for reform
noun
- (by extension) A leftist radical in other contexts.
- (historical, by extension) A sympathizer or supposed sympathizer with the French political club or its aims of democracy and social equality.
- Alternative letter-case form of jacobin, various birds.
- (historical) A member of the Jacobin Club, a radical political club prominent during the French Revolution.
- a member of the radical movement that instituted the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution
adj
noun
- An uprising, resistant struggle, or rebellious protest.
- An insurrection; a usually violent attempt to take control of a government.
- (often capitalized) The Palestinian uprisings against Israel.
- an uprising by Palestinian Arabs (in both the Gaza Strip and the West Bank) against Israel in the late 1980s and again in 2000
noun
- (derogatory, slang) A worker who acts against trade union policies; any picket crosser (strikebreaker), and especially one with devotion to union busting.
- (founding) A slight irregular protuberance which defaces the surface of a casting, caused by the breaking away of a part of the mold.
- The mange, especially when it appears on sheep.
- An incrustation over a sore, wound, vesicle, or pustule, formed during healing.
- (phytopathology) Any one of various more or less destructive fungal diseases that attack cultivated plants, forming dark-colored crustlike spots.
- A mean, dirty, paltry fellow.
- (uncountable) Any of several different diseases of potatoes producing pits and other damage on their surface, caused by streptomyces bacteria (but formerly believed to be caused by a fungus).
- Common scab, a relatively harmless variety of scab (potato disease) caused by Streptomyces scabies.
- the crustlike surface of a healing skin lesion
- someone who works (or provides workers) during a strike
verb
- (intransitive) To act as a strikebreaker.
- (intransitive) To form into scabs and be shed, as damaged or diseased skin.
- (transitive, UK, Australia, New Zealand, informal) To beg (for), to cadge or bum.
- (transitive) To remove part of a surface (from).
- (intransitive) To become covered by a scab or scabs.
- form a scab
- take the place of work of someone on strike
noun
- (colloquial, often derogatory) A prominent activist.
- (colloquial, often derogatory) Someone with strong views regarding a political cause.
- (colloquial, often derogatory) A politician.
- (colloquial, often derogatory) Someone involved in the professional life of a politician or a political campaign to varying degrees.
- (colloquial, often derogatory) Someone who follows politics regularly and is knowledgeable about at least the political news in their local area.
- a person active in party politics
noun
adj
noun
- A word used as a motto, as expressive of a principle, belief, or rule of action; a rallying cry.
- (military, security) A prearranged reply to the challenge of a sentry or a guard; a password or signal by which friends can be known from enemies.
- a secret word or phrase known only to a restricted group
- a slogan used to rally support for a cause
noun
- (derogatory, slang) An environmentalist with socialist leanings, an ecosocialist.
- (colloquial, slang) A breast, especially that of an adult or adolescent female human.
- The fruit of the watermelon plant, having a green rind and watery flesh that is typically bright red when ripe and contains black seeds.
- A project that is presented as on schedule when it actually has parts that are falling behind.
- A pinkish-red colour, like that of watermelon flesh (also called watermelon pink).
- A plant of the species Citrullus lanatus, bearing a melon-like fruit.
- large oblong or roundish melon with a hard green rind and sweet watery red or occasionally yellowish pulp
- an African melon
noun
- (countable) A proletarian word or turn of phrase; a vulgarism.
- (uncountable, rare) Proletarians regarded as a class; the proletariat.
- (uncountable) The political character and practice of the proletariat; advocacy or advancement of the proletariat’s interests.
- (uncountable) The state, quality, or condition of being a proletarian.
- The condition or political position of a member of the working class.
noun
- (idiomatic, by extension) A young person who agitates for political or other reform; a young person with a rebellious disposition.
- (historical) From the late-19th to the early-20th century, a member of a movement that campaigned for reform of the Ottoman Empire.
- a young radical who agitates for reform
noun
- (by extension) A leftist radical in other contexts.
- (historical, by extension) A sympathizer or supposed sympathizer with the French political club or its aims of democracy and social equality.
- Alternative letter-case form of jacobin, various birds.
- (historical) A member of the Jacobin Club, a radical political club prominent during the French Revolution.
- a member of the radical movement that instituted the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution
adj
verb
- (transitive) To tether to, or as if to, a picket.
- (intransitive) To protest, organized by a labour union, typically in front of the location of employment.
- (transitive) To enclose or fortify with pickets or pointed stakes.
- (transitive) To guard, as a camp or road, by an outlying picket.
- fasten with a picket
- serve as pickets or post pickets
noun
- A protester positioned outside an office, workplace etc. during a strike (usually in plural); also the protest itself.
- (sometimes figurative) A sentry.
- (military) One of the soldiers or troops placed on a line forward of a position to warn against an enemy advance; or any unit (for example, an aircraft or ship) performing a similar function.
- (historical) A type of punishment by which an offender had to rest his or her entire body weight on the top of a small stake.
- A stake driven into the ground.
- (card games, uncountable) The card game piquet.
- A tool in mountaineering that is driven into the snow and used as an anchor or to arrest falls.
- a protester posted by a labor organization outside a place of work
- a detachment of troops guarding an army from surprise attack
- a vehicle performing sentinel duty
- a person employed to keep watch for some anticipated event
- a form of military punishment used by the British in the late 17th century in which a soldier was forced to stand on one foot on a pointed stake
- a wooden strip forming part of a fence
noun
- An uprising, resistant struggle, or rebellious protest.
- An insurrection; a usually violent attempt to take control of a government.
- (often capitalized) The Palestinian uprisings against Israel.
- an uprising by Palestinian Arabs (in both the Gaza Strip and the West Bank) against Israel in the late 1980s and again in 2000
verb
- (transitive) To tether to, or as if to, a picket.
- (intransitive) To protest, organized by a labour union, typically in front of the location of employment.
- (transitive) To enclose or fortify with pickets or pointed stakes.
- (transitive) To guard, as a camp or road, by an outlying picket.
- fasten with a picket
- serve as pickets or post pickets
noun
- A protester positioned outside an office, workplace etc. during a strike (usually in plural); also the protest itself.
- (sometimes figurative) A sentry.
- (military) One of the soldiers or troops placed on a line forward of a position to warn against an enemy advance; or any unit (for example, an aircraft or ship) performing a similar function.
- (historical) A type of punishment by which an offender had to rest his or her entire body weight on the top of a small stake.
- A stake driven into the ground.
- (card games, uncountable) The card game piquet.
- A tool in mountaineering that is driven into the snow and used as an anchor or to arrest falls.
- a protester posted by a labor organization outside a place of work
- a detachment of troops guarding an army from surprise attack
- a vehicle performing sentinel duty
- a person employed to keep watch for some anticipated event
- a form of military punishment used by the British in the late 17th century in which a soldier was forced to stand on one foot on a pointed stake
- a wooden strip forming part of a fence
noun
- (derogatory, slang) A worker who acts against trade union policies; any picket crosser (strikebreaker), and especially one with devotion to union busting.
- (founding) A slight irregular protuberance which defaces the surface of a casting, caused by the breaking away of a part of the mold.
- The mange, especially when it appears on sheep.
- An incrustation over a sore, wound, vesicle, or pustule, formed during healing.
- (phytopathology) Any one of various more or less destructive fungal diseases that attack cultivated plants, forming dark-colored crustlike spots.
- A mean, dirty, paltry fellow.
- (uncountable) Any of several different diseases of potatoes producing pits and other damage on their surface, caused by streptomyces bacteria (but formerly believed to be caused by a fungus).
- Common scab, a relatively harmless variety of scab (potato disease) caused by Streptomyces scabies.
- the crustlike surface of a healing skin lesion
- someone who works (or provides workers) during a strike
verb
- (intransitive) To act as a strikebreaker.
- (intransitive) To form into scabs and be shed, as damaged or diseased skin.
- (transitive, UK, Australia, New Zealand, informal) To beg (for), to cadge or bum.
- (transitive) To remove part of a surface (from).
- (intransitive) To become covered by a scab or scabs.
- form a scab
- take the place of work of someone on strike
verb
- (intransitive, slang) To be confrontational.
- (transitive, nautical) To fix the foot of (a mast) in its step; to erect.
- To dance.
- (intransitive) To walk; to go on foot; especially, to walk a little distance.
- (intransitive) To walk slowly, gravely, or resolutely.
- (transitive) To set, as the foot.
- (intransitive, slang, African-American Vernacular) To depart.
- (transitive) To advance a process gradually, one step at a time.
- (intransitive, figuratively) To move mentally; to go in imagination.
- (intransitive) To move the foot in walking; to advance or recede by raising and moving one of the feet to another resting place, or by moving both feet in succession.
- place (a ship's mast) in its step
- put down or press the foot, place the foot
- move with one's feet in a specific manner
- treat badly
- measure (distances) by pacing
- shift or move by taking a step
- walk a short distance to a specified place or in a specified manner
- furnish with steps
- move or proceed as if by steps into a new situation
- cause (a computer) to execute a single command
noun
- (colloquial) A stepchild.
- (glassblowing) The button joining a glass's stem to its foot.
- Stepping (style of dance)
- (machines) One of a series of offsets, or parts, resembling the steps of stairs, as one of the series of parts of a cone pulley on which the belt runs.
- (nautical) A framing in wood or iron which is intended to receive an upright shaft; specifically, a block of wood, or a solid platform upon the keelson, supporting the heel of the mast.
- (in the plural) A walk; passage.
- A distinct part of a process; stage; phase.
- An advance or movement made from one foot to the other; a pace.
- Proceeding; measure; action; act.
- (in the plural) A portable framework of stairs, much used indoors in reaching to a high position.
- The part of a spade, digging stick or similar tool that a digger's foot rests against and presses on when digging; an ear, a foot-rest.
- (kinematics) A change of position effected by a motion of translation.
- (slang, primarily Netherlands) Kick scooter.
- A print of the foot; a footstep; a footprint; track.
- A gait; manner of walking.
- (machines) A bearing in which the lower extremity of a spindle or a vertical shaft revolves.
- The space passed over by one movement of the foot in walking or running.
- A small space or distance.
- (colloquial) A stepsibling.
- A rest, or one of a set of rests, for the foot in ascending or descending, as a stair, or a rung of a ladder.
- A running board where passengers step to get on and off the bus.
- (programming) A constant difference between consecutive values in a series.
- (music) The interval between two contiguous degrees of the scale.
- a sequence of foot movements that make up a particular dance
- a musical interval of two semitones
- the distance covered by a step
- a mark of a foot or shoe on a surface
- relative position in a graded series
- support consisting of a place to rest the foot while ascending or descending a stairway
- any maneuver made as part of progress toward a goal
- the sound of a step of someone walking
- the act of changing location by raising the foot and setting it down
- a short distance
- a solid block joined to the beams in which the heel of a ship's mast or capstan is fixed
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adj
- Working against union policies, working to bust unions; in particular, being a scab (worker who crosses a union picket line).
- (printing) Having a blotched, uneven appearance.
- Injured by the attachment of barnacles to the carapace of a shell.
- Diseased with the scab (mange): mangy.
- Affected with scabs; full of scabs.
- (Ireland, UK, slang) stingy; scrounging.
- covered with scabs