bootless- \BOOT-lus\
This
sense of "bootless" has nothing to do with footwear. The "boot" in this
case is an obsolete noun that meant "use" or "avail." That "boot"
descended from Old English "bōt" and is ultimately related to our modern
word "better," whose remote Germanic ancestor meant literally "of more
use." Of course, English does also see the occasional use of "bootless"
to mean simply "lacking boots," as Anne Brontë used the word in Agnes
Grey (1847): "And what would their parents think of me, if they saw or
heard the children rioting, hatless, bonnetless, gloveless, and
bootless, in the deep soft snow?"
adjective
: useless, unprofitable
- EXAMPLES
We already knew that our mechanic was on vacation, so any attempt to call him at his garage would be bootless.
"The international alliance that won the Cold War has been bootless in the case of Syria." —David Ignatius, Washington Post, February 12, 2014
"The international alliance that won the Cold War has been bootless in the case of Syria." —David Ignatius, Washington Post, February 12, 2014
- DID YOU KNOW?
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