- boot
- 01. You'd better put some [boots] on; it's wet outside.02. We bought Sophie some nice warm [boots] to wear during the winter.03. I [booted] the ball as hard as I could, and it went right over the fence.04. The young boy is in hospital after being [booted] in the head during a fight in the schoolyard.05. The neighbor's dog came into our kitchen and tried to take some food off the table, so I gave it a [boot], and it ran out the door.06. If you continue to miss classes, you could be [booted] out of the program.07. The little boy gave the pop can a good [boot] and watched it fly across the road.08. There's a spare tyre in the [boot] if you need it.09. We put all the luggage in the [boot].10. The computer froze, so I had to [reboot] it.11. Those [boots] aren't waterproof, so your feet might get wet when you get out of the boat.12. He sat on a chair in the kitchen, and slowly took off his mud covered [boots].13. The girl was wearing a short skirt and knee high leather [boots].14. A Yiddish proverb notes that a very poor man has a dry throat and wet [boots].15. In his famous novel 1984, George Orwell wrote, "If you want to imagine the future, imagine a [boot] stamping on a human face forever."16. The marks left by Neil Armstrong's [boots] when he walked on the moon will remain in the dust there for thousands of years.
Grammatical examples in English. 2013.