The Collaborative International Dictionary
Bothy \Both"y\Boothy \Booth"y\ n.; pl. -ies [Scottish. Cf. Booth.] A wooden hut or humble cot, esp. a rude hut or barrack for unmarried farm servants; a shepherd's or hunter's hut; a booth. [Scot.] [1913 Webster] ||
Boothy \Booth"y\, n. See Bothy.
Wiktionary
n. (alternative form of bothy English)
Usage examples of "boothy".
The boothies were packing up, carrying boxes to the cars and pickups parked in the narrow streets.
Eric moved carefully through the thickening traffic on the dusty lane, past the travelers haggling with the boothies over their wares.
They sat him down in a chair facing me, which was decent of them, although after a glance or two at Mr Boothy I wasn’t altogether certain.
And I’d never heard of any other Mr Boothy, for it didn’t seem like a real name at all.
The only Mr Boothy I’d heard of was the one referred to by Nigel and Ralph, the two young men I’d overheard in the restricted section of the Brentford Memorial Library all those years ago when I was a child.
So, Mr Boothy, am I right in assuming that you are the head of a secret underground organization, known as the Ministry of Serendipity, which supplies information to the government of this country and in fact influences every major decision made by the government?
Such as how, for instance, if all our thoughts are really occurring elsewhere in the galaxy, Mr Boothy is capable of even telling us.
But I watched and I listened and I saw Mr Boothy and his dogs and he did one of those routines that the supervillains always do when they have the hero captured.
I found myself thinking that I should give myself up to Mr Boothy, and lots of other dodgy things.
I overheard Mr Boothy telling you all about that when he captured you.
Sandra, however, didn’t leave without a struggle, and one of the security men had to hold her mouth shut to stop her commanding me to do something unspeakable to Mr Boothy.