buycott
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]buycott (plural buycotts)
- The opposite of a boycott: deliberately purchasing a company's or a country's products in support of their policies, or to counter a boycott.
- 2005 October 4, Leo Hickman, “Should I ... support a consumer boycott?”, in The Guardian[1]:
- And, in addition to the boycott, double your power via the "buycott" by giving your cash to firms and services that are notably behaving themselves.
- 2023 April 25, Amanda Holpuch, Julie Creswell, “2 Executives Are on Leave After Bud Light Promotion With Transgender Influencer”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
- Within days, conservative celebrities and politicians called for a boycott of the brand. These calls were then followed by calls for a reverse boycott, or buycott, encouraging people to buy Bud Light to show support for the marketing.
Verb
[edit]buycott (third-person singular simple present buycotts, present participle buycotting, simple past and past participle buycotted)
- (transitive) To support (a company, country, etc.) by buying its products.
- 2009 October 11, Anand Giridharadas, “Boycotts Minus the Pain”, in New York Times[3]:
- Proponents of buycotting see these premiums as pure political expression: citizens’ parting with money to refine the world.