Footed vs Rooted - What's the difference?
footed | rooted |
(foot)
(in combination) Having a specified form of foot.
(poetry, usually in combination) Consisting of, or having been put into, metrical feet (of a specified character or number).
Fixed in one position; immobile; unable to move.
* 2002 , Peter Loizos, Chapter Two: Misconceiving refugees?'', Renos K. Papadopoulos (editor), ''Therapeutic Care for Refugees: No Place Like Home ,
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=October 15
, author=Michael Da Silva
, title=Wigan 1 - 3 Bolton
, work=BBC Sport
(figuratively) Ingrained, as through repeated use; entrenched; habitual or instinctive.
* 1782 May, Isaac Kimber, Edward Kimber (editors), The Link-Boy'', ''The London Magazine, or, Gentleman?s Monthly Intelligencer , Volume 51,
* 1985 , Anthony Hyman, Charles Babbage: Pioneer Of The Computer ,
* 2011 , William P. Ryan, Working from the Heart: A Therapist?s Guide to Heart-Centered Psychotherapy ,
Having a basic or fundamental connection (to a thing); based, originating (from).
* 1979 , Edward Digby Baltzell, Puritan Boston and Quaker Philadelphia ,
* 1997 , William E. Reiser, To Hear God?s Word, Listen to the World: The Liberation of Spirituality ,
* 2008 , Michael Allen Gillespie, The Theological Origins of Modernity ,
(mathematics, graph theory, of a tree or graph) Having a root.
(slang) In trouble or in strife, screwed.
(Australia, New Zealand, slang) Broken, damaged, non-functional.
(computing, uncomparable) Having a root (superuser) account that has been compromised.
(root)
As verbs the difference between footed and rooted
is that footed is (foot) while rooted is (root).As adjectives the difference between footed and rooted
is that footed is (in combination) having a specified form of foot while rooted is fixed in one position; immobile; unable to move.footed
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(en adjective)- sure-footed
- each six-footed line of the verse
Derived terms
* flat-footed * lead-footed * left-footed * right-footed * sure-footedrooted
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- She stayed rooted in place.
page 54,
- Those with fewest attachments or obligations may be most vulnerable to transitions from a more rooted life, before flight, to the new as-yet unrooted or uprooted life.
citation, page= , passage=Six successive defeats had left them rooted to the bottom of the Premier League table but, clearly under instructions to attack from the outset, Bolton started far the brighter.}}
page 205,
- He will immediately break in on their mo?t rooted prejudices ; and with a kind of malignant ?atisfaction hack their darling notions with un?paring rigour and unblu?hing in?olence.
page 32,
- The greater part of his property he has acquired himself during years of industry ; but with it he has acquired the most rooted habits of suspicion.
page 47,
- With other experiences added on top, the feeling state becomes more entrenched, more rooted .
page 280,
- Proper Philadelphians, especially before they became Episcopalians, and the unfashionable branches of their families to this day are surely more rooted in Westtown than St. Paul?s, the fashionable favorite.
page 12,
- For what is gradually taking hold, I think, is a way of drawing near to God that is far more rooted' in history and far more ' rooted in the gospel than we have been accustomed to.
page 93,
- This form of humanism posed a greater danger to the monks and clerics than Italian humanism because it was less extravagant, less pagan, and more rooted in an ideal of Christian charity that the church at least nominally shared.
- I am absolutely rooted if Ferris finds out about this
- I'm going to have to call a mechanic, my car's rooted .
- You are rooted . All your base are belong to us.