Origin Story
In 1880, Captain Charles Cunningham Boycott managed the County Mayo estates of the absentee landlord Lord Erne, demanding harsh rents from the tenant farmers. Charles Stewart Parnell, leader of the Irish Land League, urged the tenants to use "social ostracism" rather than violence. The townspeople refused to deal with Boycott in any way — the postman, the shopkeepers, even his own servants turned their backs on him. In the end, he could only bring in the harvest under the protection of fifty Orangemen volunteers, at a cost that far exceeded the value of the crop. As newspapers around the world reported the affair, "boycott" became a common noun and verb meaning a collective refusal to engage.
Boycott is a rare case of a real person's surname turning into a verb. Captain Boycott himself lived until 1897 and is said to have deeply resented finding his name in the dictionary.
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Oxford English Dictionaryboycott: from Captain Charles C. Boycott (1832–1897), Irish land agent ostracized by the Irish Land League in 1880
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Online Etymology Dictionaryboycott (v.): 1880, from Captain C.C. Boycott, English land agent in County Mayo, Ireland, ostracized for harsh evictions
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Encyclopaedia BritannicaThe word entered the language almost immediately: The Times used "boycott" as a verb by November 1880
Word Evolution
Words from the Same Root
Memory Hook
boycott = BOY + COTT (as in cottage). Picture a whole village turning its back on one man's house.
""One man's tyranny gave birth to a new word — and that word became a weapon for the powerless.""