lick someone's boots
Act with extreme servility, as in This man wanted every employee to lick his boots, so he had a hard time keeping his staff. Shakespeare used this idiom in the form of lick someone's shoe in The Tempest (3:2). [Late 1500s]
Words nearby lick someone's boots
lick and a promise, a,
lick into shape,
lick observatory,
lick one's chops,
lick one's wounds,
lick someone's boots,
lick the stuffing out of,
lick-alike,
licker-in,
lickerish,
lickety-split