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Discover LudwigThe word "boots" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used as a noun, referring to a type of footwear, as a verb, meaning to kick out or get rid of someone, or as a slang term, referring to something as being cool. Example sentence: I pulled on my favorite leather boots before I headed out for the day.
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We just launched a design your own boots service and I have designed a lovely pair for spring.
And then you might just get the one terrifying delivery of the match that leaves you with 0 while everyone else has filled their boots.
There are poodle hoodies for £4.99, faux pink leather dog boots for £5.99 and a range of doggie polo shirts and pullovers.
All his new team-mates thought their coach was joking – "You would be hard-pressed to think anything other than that the hair dye had finally seeped into Kevin Squire's brain," one told the North Devon Journal – but, sure enough, Collins bought himself a new pair of boots and featured at No8 against a rather startled Newton Abbot.
The German side were wearing a revolutionary new piece of kit – boots with screw-in studs that could be altered depending on the conditions.
Alexander Lapko, a senior specialist at the Nato liaison office in Kiev, wrote in October in the New York Times that his family had to spend $2,400 £1,6155) on a uniform, boots, gun sight, flak jacket and helmet for his brother, who was issued only a Kalashnikov assault rifle when he joined the army last year.
✒With Stephanie Flanders off to fill her trademark boots at JP Morgan, the race is on to replace her as BBC economics editor.
We'd be inclined not to believe him about this, or the story about splitting a pair of boots ("I took the left, he took the right") with a friend for his first ever game, but since he did own up to diving and having a go at referees during his playing days in the same interview, we're prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt.
Slater boots it into Hodkinson and the ref calls knock-on, which is a very harsh call against NSW.
He has a red Black Diamond down jacket and brown Karrimor walking boots with a hole in the left boot.
After all, the player whose boots Molby was trying to fill at Anfield when he arrived in the mid-80s was Graeme Souness.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com