lockout

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. The opposite of a strike; a labor disruption where management refuses to allow workers into a plant to work even if they are willing.
  2. The action of installing a lock to keep someone out of an area, such as eviction of a tenant by changing the lock.
  3. The exclusion of certain people from a place, event, situation, etc.
  4. The restriction of a population to a certain area, but allowing free movement within that region, in order to prevent the spread of disease. Compare lockdown.
  5. The situation of being locked out of a building.
  6. A situation where the system is not responding to input.
  7. A safety device designed to prevent touching a moving part when it is under operation; a safety device to keep the power supply turned off during repairs; the standardized practice and method whereby such devices are deployed.
  8. The final portion of a weightlifting motion where all applicable limbs or joints are fully extended or "locked out".
  9. An exercise meant to increase strength in the lockout portion of a lifting motion.
  10. A form of vote splitting in a two-round voting system which a large number of candidates with similar politics prevent each other from advancing to the second round, allowing a pair of opposition candidates to face each other in the runoff.

Word forms

lockout lockouts lock-out

Etymology

Deverbal from lock out.

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.