Keeping these boots and other things in the receptacle mean it was named the boot locker – and, in time, simply the boot. As time went on and coachmen were not needed, the boot was still very handy and a crucial part of a desirable carriage design.
The phrase "car boot" can be traced back to the early 20th century. It is derived from the practice of placing luggage or goods in the rear storage compartment of early automobiles, resembling the way people stored items in the boots (trunks) of horse-drawn carriages.
In British English, the boot of a car is the covered space, usually at the back, where you put things such as luggage or shopping. Is the boot open? In American English, this part of a car is called the trunk. We put our bags in the trunk.
Calling a Marine a "boot" is actually a disparaging term. It's Marine Corps slang for the new guys. "The fresh meat." It's a slightly derogative expression used by older, more experienced Marines in the fleet to describe those who have just graduated and still sport their boot camp haircuts.
Etymology. From Middle English to bote (“something added to, addition”), from Old English tō bōte (“to boot, besides, moreover”). See boot (“profit, gain, remedy”).
The front window of the car is named the windscreen in the UK, while in the USA, they've tweaked it just slightly to read windshield. Both 'screen' and 'shield' suggest protection and so are still quite similar in their meaning, linguistically.
The word 'saloon' comes from the French 'salon', which means a large room. The term 'saloon car' was originally used to refer to the luxury carriages on a train. It was adopted by British carmakers in the early part of the 20th Century to describe cars with an enclosed passenger compartment.
Boots is the name of a British pharmacy chain. She's saying that if the plane sells cigarettes, she should be allowed to smoke on the plane. The man is saying that they sell condoms in the pharmacy, but one would assume they the pharmacy doesn't let you use the condoms for sex right in the store.
Trunk. vs. The part of the car used to hold items you won't need access to without stopping the vehicle is called the boot in the UK, and the trunk in the US.
Boot: the trunk of a car. Booze bus: how Australians refer to mobile breath testing units. You might spot these big vans on the side of the road where police are conducting random breath tests of motorists.
American English and British English, at times, use different words to describe the same thing. For example, Americans use the word “trunk” for the British term “boot.” Watch this show to find out more.
The Wellington boot, often shortened to welly and also known as the gumboot, is a type of waterproof boot. Originally a type of leather boot adapted from Hessian boots, a style of military riding boot, they were worn and popularised by Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington.
Even before his great victory over Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, Wellington was on his way to becoming a fashion icon. By 1813, and the victory at the Battle of Vittoria, Wellington's fame led others to start wearing this new style of boot. They duly became known as 'Wellingtons'.
A glove compartment or glove box is a compartment built into the dashboard of an automobile, located over the front-seat passenger's footwell, and often used for miscellaneous storage. The name derives from the original purpose of the compartment, to store driving gloves.
In British English, the fender is called the wing. (This may refer to either the front or rear fenders. However, in modern unibody vehicles, rear fenders may also be called quarter panels.)
A residential garage (UK: /ˈɡærɑːʒ, -rɑːdʒ, -rɪdʒ/ GARR-ahzh, -ahj, -ij, US: /ɡəˈrɑːʒ, -rɑːdʒ/ gə-RAHZH, -RAHJ) is a walled, roofed structure for storing a vehicle or vehicles that may be part of or attached to a home ("attached garage"), or a separate outbuilding or shed ("detached garage").
In Britain, a comfortable bus that carries passengers on long journeys is called a coach. The coach leaves Cardiff at twenty to eight. In America, a vehicle designed for long journeys is usually called a bus.
Boot. A pejorative term for a new Marine fresh out of boot camp. The term's origin apparently comes from Vietnam, as an acronym meaning “beginning of one's tour.” New Marines joining a unit are usually referred to as “boots” until they go on a deployment or have at least a year or two in the Corps.
bote (countable and uncountable, plural botes) (law, historical) Atonement, compensation, amends, satisfaction; as, manbote, a compensation for a man slain.