beot
English
Etymology
From Middle English beot (“boast, threat, boastful speech; boastfulness”), from Old English bēot; see below.
Noun
beot (countable and uncountable, plural beots)
- (countable) A boast or threat; boastful speech.
- (uncountable) Boastfulness.
Old English
Etymology
From earlier bihāt, second element cognate with Old Norse heit with very similar semantics.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /be͜oːt/
Derived terms
- bēotian (“to threaten, boast, vow, promise”)
- bēotlic (“arrogant, exulting, boastful, threatening”)
- bēotlīce (“arrogantly, exultingly, boastfully, threateningly”)
- bēotmæċġ (“leader”)
- bēotung (“threatening”)
- bēotword (“boast: threat”)
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