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单词 bootlegging
释义

bootlegging


boot·leg

B0397400 (bo͞ot′lĕg′)v. boot·legged, boot·leg·ging, boot·legs v.tr.1. To make, sell, or transport (alcoholic liquor) for sale illegally.2. To produce, distribute, or sell without permission or illegally: a clandestine outfit that bootlegs compact discs and tapes.v.intr.1. To engage in the bootlegging of alcoholic liquor or another product.2. To attach a transmitter to a dish antenna, creating an uplink via which a signal is sent to a satellite without the knowledge of the satellite's owner.3. Football To fake a hand-off, conceal the ball on the hip, and roll out in order to pass or especially to rush around the end. Used of a quarterback.n.1. A product, especially alcoholic liquor, that is illicitly produced, distributed, or sold.2. The part of a boot above the instep.3. Football A play in which the quarterback bootlegs.adj. Produced, sold, or transported illegally: bootleg gin; bootleg tapes.
[From a smuggler's practice of carrying liquor in the legs of boots.]
boot′leg′ger n.

bootlegging

The making, carrying, and selling of illegal goods, notably alcohol during Prohibition.
Thesaurus
Noun1.bootlegging - the act of making or transporting alcoholic liquor for sale illegallybootlegging - the act of making or transporting alcoholic liquor for sale illegally; "the Prohibition amendment made bootlegging profitable"marketing, merchandising, selling - the exchange of goods for an agreed sum of money
2.bootlegging - the act of selling illegally or without permission; "the bootlegging of videotapes is common in Asia"marketing, merchandising, selling - the exchange of goods for an agreed sum of money
IdiomsSeebootleg

bootlegging


bootlegging,

in the United States, the illegal distribution or production of liquor and other highly taxed goods. First practiced when liquor taxes were high, bootlegging was instrumental in defeating early attempts to regulate the liquor business by taxation. After the appearance of local and state option, those areas that voted to prohibit liquor were supplied with bootlegged liquor. There was also considerable smuggling from foreign countries in order to evade customs duties. In the period of prohibitionprohibition,
legal prevention of the manufacture, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages, the extreme of the regulatory liquor laws. The modern movement for prohibition had its main growth in the United States and developed largely as a result of the agitation of
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 (1920–33) these activities increased greatly, and by 1930 they were well organized as a large illegitimate industry. Certain areas were dominated by gangs that fought to defend or extend their territory. Infamous gangsters such as Al CaponeCapone, Al
(Alfonso or Alphonse Capone) , 1899–1947, American gangster, b. Naples, Italy. Brought up in New York City, he became connected with organized crime and was the subject of murder investigations.
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 in Chicago and Legs Diamond in New York City were heavily involved in bootlegging. The retail outlet in the prohibition period was the speakeasy, though a house-to-house delivery system to established customers was also well developed. A high degree of organization also prevailed in international liquor smugglingsmuggling,
illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain against Spain
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. The combination of graft and violence accompanying this industry became so intolerable that it was an important factor in the final repeal of prohibition. Bootlegging remains a practice in many areas where prohibition is still in practice. Other highly taxed products may also become a target for bootleggers, e.g., a system of bootlegging untaxed cigarettes into New York City existed in the early 1970s.

Bibliography

See K. Allsop, The Bootleggers (1961, repr. 1970); A. Sinclair, Prohibition: The Era of Excess (1962, repr. 1964); H. Waters, Smugglers of Spirits (1971).

bootlegging


  • noun

Words related to bootlegging

noun the act of making or transporting alcoholic liquor for sale illegally

Related Words

  • marketing
  • merchandising
  • selling

noun the act of selling illegally or without permission

Related Words

  • marketing
  • merchandising
  • selling
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