Bootless vs Trifling - What's the difference?
bootless | trifling | Related terms |
without boots
profitless; pointless; unavailing
* 1592–1609 , , Sonnet XXIX
trivial, or of little importance
* 2005 , .
idle or frivolous
The act of one who trifles; frivolous behaviour.
* George Croly, Samuel Warren, Marston, or the Memoirs of a Statesman
Bootless is a related term of trifling.
As adjectives the difference between bootless and trifling
is that bootless is without boots or bootless can be profitless; pointless; unavailing while trifling is trivial, or of little importance.As a noun trifling is
the act of one who trifles; frivolous behaviour.bootless
English
Etymology 1
Adjective
(-)Etymology 2
Adjective
(en adjective)- When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes, / I all alone beweep my outcast state / And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries
Synonyms
* fruitlessDerived terms
* bootlessly * bootlessnesstrifling
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- it doesn't take him long to make any of them, and he sells them for some trifling sum of money.
Synonyms
* trivial * inconsequential * petty * See alsoNoun
(en noun)- He writes on the principle, of course, that in one's dotage we are privileged to return to the triflings of our infancy, and that Downing Street cannot be better employed in these days than as a chapel of ease to Eton.