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Boot Very Common

Boot has 18 different meanings across 3 categories:

Noun · Verb · Proper Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

footwear that covers the whole foot and lower leg

"The hiker tied his laces tight on the heavy leather boots before climbing the steep mountain trail."

2

compartment in an automobile that carries luggage or shopping or tools

"he put his golf bag in the trunk"

3

the swift release of a store of affective force

"they got a great bang out of it"

"what a boot!"

"he got a quick rush from injecting heroin"

"he does it for kicks"

4

protective casing for something that resembles a leg

"The mechanic carefully installed the new rubber boot to protect the piston rod from dirt and moisture."

5

an instrument of torture that is used to heat or crush the foot and leg

"The prisoner screamed in agony as the torturers placed him inside a red-hot iron boot to punish his rebellion."

6

a form of foot torture in which the feet are encased in iron and slowly crushed

"The prisoner screamed as the blacksmith heated the heavy iron boot before placing it on his foot to crush him."

7

the act of delivering a blow with the foot

"he gave the ball a powerful kick"

"the team's kicking was excellent"

8

A heavy shoe that covers part of the leg.

"The new water treatment plant will be constructed under a BOOT agreement, where the private firm builds and operates it before transferring ownership to the government after twenty years."

9

Remedy, amends.

10

The act or process of bootstrapping; the starting or re-starting of a computing device.

11

A bootleg recording.

12

Initialism of Build–own–operate–transfer.

In plain English: A boot is when a company builds, owns, and runs a project for another company, then transfers ownership later.

"The government agreed to a boot project to construct the new highway."

Usage: As an initialism, "boot" refers to a project delivery model where one party builds, owns, and operates an asset before transferring ownership to another. Use it specifically in infrastructure or public works contexts when discussing contracting arrangements.

Verb
1

kick; give a boot to

"The soccer player decided to punish his opponent by giving him a hard boot during the match."

2

cause to load (an operating system) and start the initial processes

"boot your computer"

3

To kick.

"The technician connected an external drive to manually boot the server after the internal hard disk failed."

4

To avail, benefit, profit.

5

To bootstrap; to start a system, e.g. a computer, by invoking its boot process or bootstrap.

In plain English: To boot means to start up a device like a computer.

"The technician had to manually bootstrap the server after the power outage."

Usage: Use "boot" when referring to starting a device like a computer or software program; it describes initiating the operating system or application sequence. For example, "Please wait while your computer boots up."

Proper Noun
1

A surname​.

"John Boot won the regional chess tournament last night."

Example Sentences
"The government agreed to a boot project to construct the new highway." noun
"I kicked his door with my boot to get him out." noun
"She packed her clothes into a heavy travel boot for the trip." noun
"The new shoes have a very comfortable rubber boot covering the ankle." noun
"The technician had to manually bootstrap the server after the power outage." verb
See Also
clamper stretcher doughnut counter boots bootmaking winkle picker ice skate
Related Terms
clamper stretcher doughnut counter boots bootmaking winkle picker ice skate spur leather protect bottine winter boot wellington innersole player valenok profit shoe valenki device
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
footwear compartment exhilaration shell instrument of torture torture blow kick resuscitate
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
buskin cowboy boot Hessian boot hip boot riding boot rubber boot ski boot goal-kick punt place kick dropkick

Origin

The word "boot" comes from Middle English and originally meant a shoe. It likely traces back to a Germanic root meaning "short" or "blunt," which is also related to the word "butt."

Rhyming Words
oot zoot goot poot soot toot doot noot coot root koot hoot loot foot woot moot sloot snoot froot groot
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