GoGuides Verified Text
BOOT
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Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:boot:98e8ed7d6239
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
35cd3e8d74fdad50b5085a73b5422d88c46bf1318b913e9ede2acab052dd84b8
Computed Hash
35cd3e8d74fdad50b5085a73b5422d88c46bf1318b913e9ede2acab052dd84b8
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:42:38
Source URL
Verified Text
boot, (1) (from the o. eng. _bot_, a word common to teutonic languages, e.g. goth, _bota_, "good, advantage," o.h.g. _buoza_, mod. ger. _busse_, "penance, fine"; cf. "better," the comparative of "good"), profit or advantage. the word survives in "bootless," i.e. useless or unavailing, and in such expressions, chiefly archaistic, as "what boots it?" "bote," an old form, survives in some old compound legal words, such as "house-bote," "fire-bote," "hedge-bote," &c., for particular rights of "estover," the norman french word corresponding to the saxon "bote" (see estovers and commons). the same form survives also in such expressions as "thief-bote" for the old english customary compensation paid for injuries. (2) (a word of uncertain origin, which came into english through the o. fr. _bote_, modern _botte_; med. lat. _botta_ or _bota_), a covering for the foot. properly a boot covers the whole lower part of the leg, sometimes reaching to or above the knee, but in common usage it is applied to one which reaches only above the ankle, and is thus distinguished from "shoe" (see costume and shoe). the "boot" of a coach has the same derivation. it was originally applied to the fixed outside step, the french _botte_, then to the uncovered spaces on or beside the step on which the attendants sat facing sideways. both senses are now obsolete, the term now being applied to the covered receptacles under the seats of the guard and coachman.