Bootleg

Bootleg

Bootleg or Bootlegging usually refers to making, transporting and/or selling illegal alcoholic liquor or copyrighted material; the term originates from concealing flasks of alcohol in the legging of boots. Bootleg may also refer to:

* Smuggling
* Rum-running, the sale or transport of liquor without regard to legal regulations and taxes
* Bootleg role-playing games, illegally copied rulebooks for tabletop role-playing games
* Bootleg mining, hidden or illegal coal mining
* Bootleg (radio), the use of illegal equipment, frequencies, or operating procedures in two-way radio
* Bootlegging (business), the secret organization of an innovation process
* "Bootleg" (TV serial), a 2002 BBC miniseries for children that is an adaptation of the novel of the same name by Alex Shearer. It may also refer to the manga series "Chocolate Underground" which itself was based on the book series.
* Bootleg (comics), a character from the comic book "New Men"
* Bootleg play, a tactic in American football
* Bootleg turn, a driving maneuver
* Bootleg (Emulation)
* Bootleg is a brand name used by C&J Clark for Childrens shoes and trainers.
* Bootlegging, a common colloquial slang term amongst owners of railroad speeders to describe the illegal operation of a Speeder on a railway.
* Bell-bottoms or bootleg pants, trousers which flare out at the bottom of the legs and may cover the wearer's shoes

;Music
* Bootleg recording, an otherwise unavailable audio or video recording distributed without the artist's consent
* Copyright infringement, the making of unauthorized duplicates of material already commercially available
* Counterfeit merchandise
* Mashup (music), music which contains unlicensed samples of other music
* Live Bootleg (album), a number of albums
* Bootleg (Larry Norman album)
* Bootleg (Bad News album)
* Boot-Leg, a song by Booker T & the MG's


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  • Bootleg — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Un bootleg (o edición pirata) es una edición no autorizada, pudiendo tratarse tanto de música como de libros, videojuegos, series de televisión o películas. En el caso de videojuegos y anime este fenómeno está muy… …   Wikipedia Español

  • bootleg — boot‧leg [ˈbuːtleg] adjective [only before a noun] made or sold illegally: • 900 bootleg videos of pop concerts have been seized by trading standards officers. • bootleg whisky * * * Ⅰ. bootleg UK US /ˈbuːtleg/ adjective [before noun] COMMERCE, E …   Financial and business terms

  • bootleg — boot·leg 1 n: something bootlegged bootleg adj bootleg 2 vb boot·legged, boot·leg·ging vt 1: to produce, reproduce, or distribute without authorization or license 2 …   Law dictionary

  • bootleg — (n.) leg of a boot, 1630s, from BOOT (Cf. boot) (n.1) + LEG (Cf. leg) (n.). As an adjective in referencer to illegal iquor, 1889, Amer.Eng. slang, from the trick of concealing a flask of liquor down the leg of a high boot. Before that the bootleg …   Etymology dictionary

  • bootleg — ootleg adj. distributed or sold illicitly; especially, imported illegally. Syn: black market, contraband, smuggled. [WordNet 1.5] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • bootleg — ootleg v. 1. to sell illicit products such as drugs or alcohol. Syn: smuggle. [WordNet 1.5] 2. to produce alcohol illegally. [WordNet 1.5] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • bootleg — *smuggled, contraband …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • bootleg — [adj] illegal black market, bootlegged, contraband, illicit, pirated, smuggled, unauthorized, under the counter, unlawful, unofficial, unsanctioned; concept 319 Ant. legal  …   New thesaurus

  • bootleg — {{/stl 13}}{{stl 7}}[wym. butleg] {{/stl 7}}{{stl 8}}rz. mnż IIa, D. u {{/stl 8}}{{stl 7}} płyta (lub kaseta) nagrana nielegalnie <ang.> {{/stl 7}} …   Langenscheidt Polski wyjaśnień

  • bootleg — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ (of alcoholic drink or a recording) made or distributed illegally. ► NOUN ▪ an illegal musical recording. DERIVATIVES bootlegger noun bootlegging noun. ORIGIN from a practice among smugglers of hiding bottles in their boots …   English terms dictionary

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