Bigfoot

name
/ˈbɪɡˌfʊt/

Etymology

August/September 1958, originally Big Foot, big + foot, relating to the large size of its supposed footprints relative to human footprints.

  1. inherited from *pṓds
  2. inherited from *fōts
  3. inherited from *fōt
  4. inherited from fōt
  5. inherited from fot
  6. compounded as bigfoot — “big + foot

Definitions

  1. A very large, hairy, humanoid creature, similar to the yeti, said to live in the…

    A very large, hairy, humanoid creature, similar to the yeti, said to live in the wilderness areas of the United States and Canada, especially the Pacific Northwest.

    • This imprint was made either Wednesday night or early Thursday morning by "Big Foot".
    • Some Earth people believe Bigfoot lives in underground caves; others believe Bigfoot is connected with extraterrestrials; still others believe Bigfoot is a spirit that can sometimes manifest in form.
  2. An individual creature of this type.

    • My answer to those who believe that all Bigfoot are just huge cuddly Ewoks is to remind them that there is plenty of evidence that every member of the great apes family […] has exhibited hostility […].
  3. Alternative letter-case form of bigfoot.

  4. + 4 more definitions
    1. To control or manage forcefully

      To control or manage forcefully; to exercise authority over.

      • Most recently, Allen bigfooted Walter out of the way to explore a merger with SBC Communications, Inc., the largest of the regional Bells.
      • "Joel is out to get the best and brightest. It is his team to build," Walcott said, his comments appearing to reject speculation that Bloomberg was bigfooting the deputy search.
    2. To behave in an authoritative, commanding manner.

      • Later, Dick Cheney was Bigfooting around the West Wing, looking for heads.
    3. Alternative letter-case form of Bigfoot, a hairy hominid.

      • I mean, for the love of the Force, he's a bigfoot with a gun; how come he's not the baddest badass in the Empire? Instead we get a walking carpet who sucks at board games and has a fetish for restraints.
    4. A person with a big footprint

      A person with a big footprint; a prominent person, especially a journalist.

      • And he's living a pundit’s dream by being frequently cited—not just by fellow bloggers, but by media bigfeet.
      • Along with other media bigfeet, I chatted up Rummy and C.I.A. chief George Tenet, both of whom were in on the secret of the capture of Saddam a few hours before.
      • His combination of brains and bravery–even in the face of his grave miscalculation regarding Dean–when viewed against the smug, shallow self-satisfaction of the media bigfeet who mock him, redounds enormously to Gore’s benefit.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for Bigfoot. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA