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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
walkout
noun
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Students have staged several walkouts in protest of tuition increases.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A scattered, one-day walkout in 1994 cost the company $ 50 million.
▪ Although Hipp voiced optimism, airline and union officials earlier were grim about prospects for averting a walkout.
▪ But Putin's forces muscled the bill through 251 to 22, with the Communists staging a walkout during the vote.
▪ In the long run, the outcome of the Delphi Chassis strike could be less important than the walkout itself.
▪ That was the third angry walkout in one biological day, and the second threat to resign in less than a bio-week.
▪ The decision followed Friday's lead from colleagues at Leyland, Lancashire, who also voted against a walkout.
▪ Those four little letters could cost Hardee more than the walkouts he has grown used to.
▪ When they did, walkouts never lasted long.
Wiktionary
walkout

n. 1 a sudden stoppage of work; a strike 2 a similar mass action of people leaving a place as a form of protest

WordNet
walkout
  1. n. a strike in which the workers walk out

  2. the act of walking out (of a meeting or organization) as a sign of protest; "there was a walkout by the Black members as the chairman rose to speak"

Wikipedia
Walkout

In labor disputes, a walkout is a labor strike, the act of employees collectively leaving the workplace as an act of protest.

A walkout can also mean the act of leaving a place of work, school, a meeting, a company, or an organization, especially if meant as an expression of protest or disapproval.

A walkout can be seen as different from a strike in that a walkout can occur spontaneously, and need not necessarily involve all the workers present, whereas a strike is often voted on beforehand by the workers, giving notification both to all of the workers and to the company affected.

Walkouts have often been staged against the presence of a speaker or the content of an in-progress speech at a meeting. The protest, which is often a silent, non-violent means of expressing disapproval, is often interpreted as an exercise of the freedom of association while allowing the speaker to exercise the freedom of speech, albeit with a reduced audience in attendance.

Walkout (film)

Walkout is a 2006 HBO film based on a true story of the 1968 East L.A. walkouts. It premiered March 18, 2006 on HBO. Starring Alexa Vega, Efren Ramirez and Michael Peña, the film was directed by Edward James Olmos. Moctezuma Esparza, one of the students who was involved in the walkouts, was the film's executive producer and many of the actors playing parents in the film were also protesters.

Usage examples of "walkout".

There was finally such a hue and cry and actual mass walkouts from services that the Archbishop finally decided to fill the next Durham bishopric with me.