0 past simple and past participle of boot --
1 to kick someone or something hard with the foot: --
They booted him in the head.
2 When a computer boots (up), it becomes ready for use by getting the necessary information into its memory, and when you boot (up) a computer, you cause it to do this. --
If one is partly corporatist and one is booted out after a time, one disappears.
Instead of being booted out, it may boot out.
I wonder then on what principle he booted them out.
His face had been kicked and booted so badly that his face was no longer recognisable as a face.
These people will not be able to be booted off the board by shareholders who have money in the company.
It seems absurd that they should be booted out as unqualified teachers.
He has walked up to the penalty spot and booted it over the bar.
We need stronger doors for flats — at the moment such flats have flimsy doors that can be booted in all too easily.