English » Polish

I . boot [bu:t] N

1. boot (shoe):

boot
but m
kalosze mpl

2. boot inf (kick):

to give sb a boot
to get the boot

3. boot COMPUT:

boot
warm/cold boot

4. boot Brit AUTO:

boot

II . boot [bu:t] VB trans

1. boot inf (kick):

boot

2. boot (start):

boot [up]

boot out VB trans inf

1. boot out (throw out):

boot out

2. boot out (dismiss):

boot out

ski boot N

ski boot

car-boot sale N Brit

wellington (boot) [ˌwelɪŋtənˈ-] N esp Brit

wellington (boot)
kalosz m

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
After the lesson, the models were told to go to a boot camp.
en.wikipedia.org
Also, their boot length was shortened from knee-high (in the pilot episode) to normal length boots in the final series.
en.wikipedia.org
In addition to simple, utilitarian models made of wood or a synthetic material, representational cast iron boot jacks are also available.
en.wikipedia.org
Unless it's the fifth, in which case boot the mangy thing up the guts.
www.theroar.com.au
The ski boot was on the other foot.
www.racinguk.com
It will feature a bouncy castle, stalls and live entertainment and visitors are invited to take part in a car-boot sale, for $15 per site.
www.stuff.co.nz
Standard on the exterior is a rear boot spoiler, rear diffuser and a resigned front and rear bumper dedicated to improve the aerodynamic performance.
en.wikipedia.org
Then the man's boot unbuckles by itself.
en.wikipedia.org
The piece of land resembles a boot, which is why it is given such name.
en.wikipedia.org
When compared to computers with pirated software, computers with genuine software performed faster during boot-up, in opening documents, opening programs, and loading popular internet pages that were text and image-heavy.
technology.inquirer.net

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