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boot verb English

Meaning boot verb meaning

What does boot verb mean?

boot verb

Any of various verbs, generally in Romance languages, in which the first and second persons plural are affected differently by some phonological or morphological rule than the other four forms. A verb in Italian so affected in the second and third persons singular.

Examples boot verb examples

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News and current affairs

In short, Germany during the World Cup is reminiscent of a Shakespearean midsummer night's dream, with a touch of Woodstock to boot.
And they are environmentally dirty to boot.
To boot, we have been told that government is so clever that it might even make money on the whole affair.
Despite all that had gone before, the public and their representatives were stunned to learn that bankers had systematically undermined the foundations of a global market benchmark - one with London in its name to boot - for personal gain.
So, at September's summit, leaders will be asked to re-boot the diplomatic process.
And it may end up increasing global CO2 emissions to boot.
To boot, we are told that government is so clever that it might even make money on the whole affair.
But I do think that modern macroeconomists need to be rounded up, on pain of loss of tenure, and sent to a year-long boot camp with the assembled monetary historians of the world as their drill sergeants.
But everyone in the financial markets knows that the EFSF has insufficient firepower to undertake that task - and that it has an unworkable governance structure to boot.
But that re-boot must start now, and the UN, specifically the General Assembly, is the place to begin.
One major challenge to the boot-strap approach is developing cheap and durable batteries.
Once such technologies have been perfected, we can turn our attention to developing a boot-strap business model.
Monks find their life's meaning in a most austere environment, and military boot camps are thought to build character.
Shale-gas wells deplete far more rapidly than conventional fields do. And they are environmentally dirty to boot.
Neo-conservatives writers like Max Boot argue that the US should provide troubled countries with the sort of enlightened foreign administration once provided by self-confident Englishmen in pith helmets.
Yet, by doing so, he may have made himself less popular, and is being accused of elitism to boot.
The reaction of Boot, and others of his persuasion, points to a genuine dilemma that always occurs in authoritarian systems that use some semblance of democracy to bolster their legitimacy.
It is time that Israel took its boot off Gaza's windpipe.
Fortunately, enough was accomplished in Copenhagen to re-boot the process.

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boot | verb