bot

noun
/bɒt/UK/bɑt/US

Etymology

Unknown. Possibly a modification of Scottish Gaelic boiteag (“maggot”), but the word already existed in Middle English, so the reverse direction of borrowing is likely. Possibly from Middle Low German [Term?].

  1. derived from boiteag

Definitions

  1. The larva of a botfly, which infests the skin of various mammals, producing warbles, or…

    The larva of a botfly, which infests the skin of various mammals, producing warbles, or the nasal passage of sheep, or the stomach of horses.

    • One deer, later found to be heavily parasitized by bots, suffered severe vomiting attacks during the early spring.
    • Jerry prepared a glass jar with sterilized sand to act as a nursery for his pulsating bot, but despite his tender ministrations the larva dried out and died before it could encase itself in a pupal sheath.
  2. To bugger.

  3. To ask for and be given something with the direct intention of exploiting the thing’s…

    To ask for and be given something with the direct intention of exploiting the thing’s usefulness, almost exclusively with cigarettes.

    • Can I bot a smoke?
    • Jonny always bots off me. I just wish he’d get his own pack.
  4. + 10 more definitions
    1. The bottom or backside.

    2. A physical robot.

      • I stared at the bot and recognized her for the first time. She was me.
      • As he guided the bot, Andrews reminisced about his younger days in Wyoming, when he had witnessed a mishandled load of wheat puff out a dusty fog.
      • The bot juddered to a halt, as the whole lower segment of its power arm darkened.
    3. A piece of software designed to perform a task (often a minor but repetitive one)…

      A piece of software designed to perform a task (often a minor but repetitive one) automatically or on command, especially when operating with the appearance of a (human) user profile or account.

      • Twitter bots can leverage Twitter′s text message support to allow users to accomplish tasks from their cell phones. You could consider Twitter accounts that are simply an automated import of blog′s RSS feed a Twitter bot.
    4. A computer-controlled character in a video game, especially a multiplayer one.

      • Next, you are placed in the world of RuneScape, which is similar to our own, with trees, grass, buildings, animals, and of course, people. In RuneScapes shops and banks there are bots' (computer-controlled players).
      • Most games offer both single player mode, in which a player competes against computer rivals—bots—and a multiplayer mode, which is a contest among people only.
    5. A supremely unskilled player.

      • "That lobby was bronze negative 10!" Aydan joked on-stream, noting how easy it felt for his squad. "We got blessed with the lobby. It was such a bot lobby."
    6. A person with no ability to think for themselves

      A person with no ability to think for themselves; (by extension) an unintelligent or contemptible person.

      • The meaning of the word "bot" on Twitter/X seems to have shifted over time, with people originally using it to flag automated accounts, but now employing it to insult people they disagree with[.]
    7. To use a bot, or automated program.

      • Players caught botting will be banned from the server.
    8. Initialism of beginning of tape.

    9. Initialism of Build–operate–transfer.

    10. Abbreviation of Bǽh-oe-tu.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for bot. 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