boat
[ boht ]
/ boʊt /
noun
verb (used without object)
to go in a boat: We boated down the Thames.
verb (used with object)
to transport in a boat: They boated us across the bay.
to remove (an oar) from the water and place athwartships.
Compare ship1(def 10).
Idioms for boat
Origin of boat
before 900; Middle English
boot (noun), Old English
bāt; cognate with Old Norse
beit
OTHER WORDS FROM boat
boat·a·ble, adjective boat·less, adjectiveWords nearby boat
British Dictionary definitions for miss the boat
boat
/ (bəʊt) /
noun
verb
(intr)
to travel or go in a boat, esp as a form of recreation
(tr)
to transport or carry in a boat
Word Origin for boat
Old English
bāt; related to Old Norse
beit boat
Idioms and Phrases with miss the boat (1 of 2)
miss the boat
Fail to take advantage of an opportunity, as in Jean missed the boat on that club membership. This expression, which alludes to not being in time to catch a boat, has been applied more widely since the 1920s.
Fail to understand something, as in I'm afraid our legislator missed the boat on that amendment to the bill. [Mid-1900s] Also see miss the point.
Idioms and Phrases with miss the boat (2 of 2)
boat
see burn one's bridges (boats); in the same boat; miss the boat; rock the boat.