(informal) punished by a
group of people by their refusing to speak or
associate with one as a result of
having offended them or
broken some rule. This expression dates from the
time of the
English Civil War of the seventeenth century between
King Charles I and
Parliament.
Coventry, a city in
central England, was a
Parliamentary stronghold. The soldiers of the
king were so disliked by the citizens there that when they were captured in neighboring towns, they were
sent to
Coventry, where it was known that the people would ignore them, not speak to them and carry on as if they were not there.