PICKET


Meaning of PICKET in English

n. & v.

--n.

1. a person or group of people outside a place of work, intending to persuade esp. workers not to enter during a strike etc.

2 a pointed stake or peg driven into the ground to form a fence or palisade, to tether a horse, etc.

3 (also picquet, piquet) Mil. a a small body of troops sent out to watch for the enemy, held in readiness, etc. b a party of sentries. c an outpost. d a camp-guard on police duty in a garrison town etc.

--v. (picketed, picketing)

1. a tr. & intr. station or act as a picket. b tr. beset or guard (a factory, workers, etc.) with a picket or pickets.

2 tr. secure (a place) with stakes.

3 tr. tether (an animal).

Phrases and idioms:

picket line a boundary established by workers on strike, esp. at the entrance to the place of work, which others are asked not to cross.

Derivatives:

picketer n.

Etymology: F piquet pointed stake f. piquer prick, f. pic PICK(2)

Oxford English vocab.      Оксфордский английский словарь.