Dote vs Bote - What's the difference?
dote | bote |
To be excessively fond of.
(archaic) To act in a foolish manner; to be senile.
* Dryden
* South
(Ireland) A darling, a cutie.
* Ted’s daughter is such a dote .
(obsolete) An imbecile; a dotard.
The atonement, compensation, amends, satisfaction, penance, expiation; as, manbote, a compensation for a man slain.
A payment of any kind.
A privilege or allowance of necessaries, especially in feudal times.
(legal, historical) A right to take wood from property not one's own.
(obsolete) repairs
(obsolete) advantage, benefit, profit, cure, remedy
As a verb dote
is .As a noun bote is
.dote
English
Alternative forms
* doat (obsolete)Verb
(dot)- Little Bill's parents just keep doting on him.
- Time has made you dote , and vainly tell / Of arms imagined in your lonely cell.
- He survived the use of his reason, grew infatuated, and doted long before he died.
Synonyms
* (to be fond of) adore, loveNoun
(en noun)- (Halliwell)
Anagrams
* ----bote
English
Alternative forms
* *Noun
(en-noun)- Iesu For synne þat hath my soule bounde, Let þi blessed blood be my bote . — Iesu þat art heuene
- Þey shulde..do bote to brugges þat to-broke were. — Pier's Plowman, 1400
- Heo lufeden bi wurten, bi moren, and bi rote; nas þer nan oðer boten . — Layamon's Brut, 1275