different between bote vs hote
bote
English
Alternative forms
- bot
Etymology
Learned borrowing from Middle English b?te (“advantage, benefit, profit; relief, salvation; atonement, amends, expiation; cure”), from Old English b?t (“help, relief, advantage, remedy; compensation for an injury or wrong; (peace) offering, recompense, amends, atonement, reformation, penance, repentance”), from Proto-Germanic *b?t? (“recompense”). Doublet of boot (inherited from the same Middle English word).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /b??t/
- (US) IPA(key): /bo?t/
Noun
bote (plural botes) (law, historical)
- The atonement, compensation, amends, satisfaction; as, manbote, a compensation for a man slain.
- A privilege or allowance of necessaries, especially in feudal times.
- A right to take wood from property not one's own.
Usage notes
- Often used to form compounds indicating a right to take wood only for a specific purpose.
Synonyms
- estovers
Derived terms
References
- bote in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- Middle English Dictionary
Anagrams
- -to-be, Beto, Tebo, Tobe, beot, boet, to-be, tobe
Afrikaans
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?b??.t?/
Noun
bote
- plural of boot
Bikol Central
Etymology
Clipping of botelya
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bo.t?/
Noun
bote
- bottle
Cebuano
Etymology
From Spanish bote (“boat”), from Middle English bot, from Old English b?t, from Proto-Germanic *baitaz.
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: bo?te
Noun
bote
- a lifeboat
Khumi Chin
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bo?.te?/
Verb
bote
- to hit, beat
References
- K. E. Herr (2011) The phonological interpretation of minor syllables, applied to Lemi Chin?[1], Payap University, page 48
Middle English
Etymology 1
From Old English b?t, from Proto-Germanic *b?t?.
Alternative forms
- boot, bot, boote
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bo?t/
Noun
bote (plural botes or boten)
- Help, advantage, benefit; that which is good, helpful, or relieving:
- Heo lufeden bi wurten, bi moren, and bi rote; nas þer nan oðer boten. — Layamon's Brut, 1275
- Saving or extrication from distress or danger; something or someone which provides it.
- Salvation (release or rescue from eternal punishment), or one who acts as salvation
- An avenue of escape; a method through which one can release themself from danger.
- Utility, usefulness; that which is useful, expedient, or suitable.
- A reprieve or the offering of forgiveness from punishment or danger.
- Activity done as redress or recompense for (one's or another's) sins; expiation.
- Iesu […] For synne þat hath my soule bounde, Let þi blessed blood be my bote. — Iesu þat art hevene
- Mirth, gladness; the feeling or emotion of being happy and joyful.
- The quelling, curing, or expurgation of disease or sickness; medical recovery.
- (rare) Recompense, amends or compensation; behaviour in return for one's wrongs.
- (rare) An extra, augment, or addition; something to boot.
- (rare) A medicinal or pharmaceutical cure or remedy; something used to quell disease.
- (rare) Repair work; the act of fixing structures or buildings.
- Þey shulde..do bote to brugges þat to-broke were. — Pier's Plowman, 1400
Related terms
- boteles
- boten
- botnen
Descendants
- English: boot
- ? English: bote (also from Old English b?t)
- Scots: bute, buit
Etymology 2
Borrowed from Old French bote (Modern French botte); ultimately of Germanic origin.
Alternative forms
- (Northern ME) but, buyt, bute
- boot, bot, boote
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bo?t/
Noun
bote (plural botes)
- A boot or similar item of footwear; a shoe with a cover for part of the leg.
- (rare) A cover for the leg.
Derived terms
- boten
Descendants
- English: boot
- ? Scots: boot
- Scots: bute, buit
References
- “b??te, n.(2).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2019-1-5.
Etymology 3
From Old English b?t.
Noun
bote
- Alternative form of bot (“boat”)
Etymology 4
From Old English b?tian.
Verb
bote
- Alternative form of boten (“to resolve”)
Old French
Etymology 1
Perhaps of Germanic origin, from Frankish *bautan (“to strike”).
Noun
bote f (oblique plural botes, nominative singular bote, nominative plural botes)
- boot (specifically, a high-sided leather shoe that also covers the bottom of the leg)
Descendants
- ? English: boot
- French: botte
Etymology 2
Latin buttis.
Noun
bote f (oblique plural botes, nominative singular bote, nominative plural botes)
- cask; barrel
Etymology 3
See bat.
Noun
bote m (oblique plural botes, nominative singular botes, nominative plural bote)
- Alternative form of bat
References
- Godefroy, Frédéric, Dictionnaire de l'ancienne langue française et de tous ses dialectes du IXe au XVe siècle (1881) (bote, supplement)
Portuguese
Pronunciation
- (South Brazil) IPA(key): /?b?.te/
- Homophone: bot
Etymology 1
From Old French bot, from Middle English bot, from Old English b?t.
Noun
bote m (plural botes)
- rowing boat (boat propelled only by oars)
- (by extension) any small boat
- Synonym: barquinho
Etymology 2
From botar (“to put; to lay”).
Noun
bote m (plural botes)
- (biology) an animal’s sudden thrust forward towards its prey
- (figuratively) a sudden attack
- (Brazil, soccer) a goalkeeper’s jump to catch the ball
Derived terms
- errar o bote
Verb
bote
- first-person singular (eu) present subjunctive of botar
- third-person singular (ele and ela, also used with você and others) present subjunctive of botar
- third-person singular (você) affirmative imperative of botar
- third-person singular (você) negative imperative of botar
Spanish
Etymology
From Middle English bot, from Old English b?t (“boat”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?bote/, [?bo.t?e]
- Rhymes: -ote
Noun
bote m (plural botes)
- boat, dinghy
- Synonym: barco
- vessel, can, canister, container, jar, tin
- Synonym: recipiente
- jackpot, pot, pool (large cash prize)
Derived terms
- a bote pronto
- bote salvavidas
- chupar del bote
- darse el bote
- de bote
- de bote y voleo
- de bote en bote
- en el bote
- bote de remos (“rowboat”)
- bote de premios (“prize pool”)
Descendants
- ? Cebuano: bote
Verb
bote
- Formal second-person singular (usted) imperative form of botar.
- First-person singular (yo) present subjunctive form of botar.
- Formal second-person singular (usted) present subjunctive form of botar.
- Third-person singular (él, ella, also used with usted?) present subjunctive form of botar.
Tagalog
Etymology
Clipping of botelya
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bo.t?/
Noun
bote
- bottle
Synonyms
- botelya (dated)
Venetian
Noun
bote
- plural of bota
Yogad
Etymology
Borrowed from Spanish bote.
Noun
bote
- bottle
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hote
English
Etymology
From Middle English hoten, hoaten, haten, from Old English h?tan (“to command, be called”), from Proto-Germanic *haitan? (“command, name”), from Proto-Indo-European *keyd-, from *key- (“put in motion, be moving”). Cognate with Saterland Frisian heete (“to be named”), Dutch heten (“to be named”), German Low German heten (“to be called, be named”), German heißen (“to be called”), Swedish heta (“to be called”). Related to hight, hest.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /h??t/
- Rhymes: -??t
Verb
hote (third-person singular simple present hotes, present participle hoting, simple past hight, past participle hoten)
- (transitive, dialectal or obsolete) To command; to enjoin.
- (obsolete) To promise.
- (obsolete, intransitive) To be called, be named.
- (obsolete, transitive) To call, name.
Usage notes
- In the sense of "to command, enjoin", hight may be replaced as follows:
- The captain hight five sailors stay on the other side of the inlet and guard the cargo. = The captain said to five sailors: Stay on the other side of the inlet and guard the cargo.
- Beowulf hight his men build a great mead-hall, the kind of which man's progeny should hear tell forever. = Beowulf said to his men: Build a great mead-hall, the kind of which man's progeny should hear tell forever.
- The word survives only as part of the oral tradition in rural Scotland and Northern England. It is no longer used in common speech.
Related terms
- behote
Anagrams
- Theo, Theo., etho-, theo, theo-
Middle English
Noun
hote
- Alternative form of ote
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