Definition of Bothan

1. a booth [n -S] - See also: booth

Lexicographical Neighbors of Bothan

botching
botchings
botchy
bote
botel
boteless
botels
boten
botete
botetes
botflies
botfly
both
both(a)
both-hands
bothan (current term)
bothans
bothe
bother
botheration
botherations
botherder
botherders
bothered
botherer
botherers
bothering
bothers
bothersome
bothersomely

Literary usage of Bothan

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. British Poets of the Nineteenth Century: Poems by Wordsworth, Coleridge by Curtis Hidden Page (1910)
"Thanks to Saint bothan. son of mine, Save Gawain, ne'er could pen a line ; So swore I, and I swear it still, Let my boy-bishop fret his fill. ..."

2. Travels Amongst the Todas: Or The Study of a Primitive Tribe in South India by William Elliot Marshall, George Uglow Pope (1873)
"The Boath an exceptional curiosity—Speculations regarding itj a Bethel? connected •with the bothan ? ON a previous visit to the village close to which this ..."

3. Legends of the Braes O' Mar by John Grant (1876)
"... first fight with ike Kern—His pursuit of the murderer Anton—He returns with the wrong head—This mistake rectified—The bothan-leathan and ..."

4. The New Statistical Account of Scotland (1845)
"According to Chalmers, St bothan was the patron of this parish, ... If it be said that St bothan, who is not mentioned in Keith's Catalogue of the Bishops, ..."

5. Caledonia: Or, A Historical and Topographical Account of North Britain, from by George Chalmers (1889)
"Sir William Hay, in 1421, converted the church of St. bothan into a collegiate ... The church now lost its collegiate form; the name of Saint bothan was no ..."

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