- To boot
- Boot Boot (b[=oo]t), n. [OE. bot, bote, advantage, amends,
cure, AS. b[=o]t; akin to Icel. b[=o]t, Sw. bot, Dan. bod,
Goth. b[=o]ta, D. boete, G. busse; prop., a making good or
better, from the root of E. better, adj. [root]255.]
1. Remedy; relief; amends; reparation; hence, one who brings
relief.
[1913 Webster]
He gaf the sike man his boote. --Chaucer. [1913 Webster]
Thou art boot for many a bruise And healest many a wound. --Sir W. Scott. [1913 Webster]
Next her Son, our soul's best boot. --Wordsworth. [1913 Webster]
2. That which is given to make an exchange equal, or to make up for the deficiency of value in one of the things exchanged. [1913 Webster]
I'll give you boot, I'll give you three for one. --Shak. [1913 Webster]
3. Profit; gain; advantage; use. [Obs.] [1913 Webster]
Then talk no more of flight, it is no boot. --Shak. [1913 Webster]
{To boot}, in addition; over and above; besides; as a compensation for the difference of value between things bartered. [1913 Webster]
Helen, to change, would give an eye to boot. --Shak. [1913 Webster]
A man's heaviness is refreshed long before he comes to drunkenness, for when he arrives thither he hath but changed his heaviness, and taken a crime to boot. --Jer. Taylor. [1913 Webster]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English. 2000.