Your foot is the part of your body at the end of your leg. Your foot includes your toes.
When you use foot with this meaning, its plural is feet.
If someone goes somewhere on foot, they walk, rather than using some form of transport.
A foot is also a unit for measuring length, equal to 12 inches or 30.48 centimetres. When foot has this meaning, its usual plural is feet.
However, you can use foot as the plural in front of words like high, tall, and long.
You always use foot as the plural in front of another noun. For example, if a gap is twenty feet wide, you refer to it as a 'twenty foot gap'. Don't refer to it as a 'twenty feet gap'.
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| Noun | 1. | foot - the part of the leg of a human being below the ankle joint; "his bare feet projected from his trousers"; "armored from head to foot"human, human being, man - any living or extinct member of the family Hominidae characterized by superior intelligence, articulate speech, and erect carriage arcuate artery, arteria arcuata - curved artery in the foot arteria digitalis, digital arteries - arteries in the hand and foot that supply the fingers and toes arteria metatarsea, metatarsal artery - dorsal and plantar arteries to the metatarsal region of the foot intercapitular vein, vena intercapitalis - veins connecting the dorsal and palmar veins of the hand or the dorsal and plantar veins of the foot metatarsal vein, vena metatarsus - dorsal and plantar branches of veins serving the metatarsal region of the foot leg - a human limb; commonly used to refer to a whole limb but technically only the part of the limb between the knee and ankle pedal extremity, vertebrate foot - the extremity of the limb in vertebrates pes planus, splayfoot, flatfoot - a foot afflicted with a fallen arch; abnormally flattened and spread out instep - the arch of the foot sole - the underside of the foot toe - one of the digits of the foot little toe - the fifth smallest outermost toe heel - the back part of the human foot |
| 2. | foot - a linear unit of length equal to 12 inches or a third of a yard; "he is six feet tall" linear measure, linear unit - a unit of measurement of length | |
| 3. | foot - the lower part of anything; "curled up on the foot of the bed"; "the foot of the page"; "the foot of the list"; "the foot of the mountain" bottom - the lowest part of anything; "they started at the bottom of the hill" head - the top of something; "the head of the stairs"; "the head of the page"; "the head of the list" | |
| 4. | foot - the pedal extremity of vertebrates other than human beingsfossorial foot - foot adapted for digging as in moles hoof - the foot of an ungulate mammal bird's foot - the foot of a bird webfoot - a foot having the toes connected by folds of skin trotter - foot of a pig or sheep especially one used as food forefoot - a front foot of a quadruped hindfoot - a rear foot of a quadruped paw - a clawed foot of an animal especially a quadruped pedal extremity, vertebrate foot - the extremity of the limb in vertebrates | |
| 5. | foot - lowest support of a structure; "it was built on a base of solid rock"; "he stood at the foot of the tower"bed - a foundation of earth or rock supporting a road or railroad track; "the track bed had washed away" raft foundation - a foundation (usually on soft ground) consisting of an extended layer of reinforced concrete structure, construction - a thing constructed; a complex entity constructed of many parts; "the structure consisted of a series of arches"; "she wore her hair in an amazing construction of whirls and ribbons" support - supporting structure that holds up or provides a foundation; "the statue stood on a marble support" | |
| 6. | foot - any of various organs of locomotion or attachment in invertebratesinvertebrate - any animal lacking a backbone or notochord; the term is not used as a scientific classification tube foot - tentacular tubular process of most echinoderms (starfish and sea urchins and holothurians) having a sucker at the end and used for e.g. locomotion and respiration organ - a fully differentiated structural and functional unit in an animal that is specialized for some particular function | |
| 7. | foot - travel by walking; "he followed on foot"; "the swiftest of foot" walk - the act of walking somewhere; "he took a walk after lunch" | |
| 8. | foot - a member of a surveillance team who works on foot or rides as a passenger intelligence agent, intelligence officer, operative, secret agent - a person secretly employed in espionage for a government | |
| 9. | foot - an army unit consisting of soldiers who fight on foot; "there came ten thousand horsemen and as many fully-armed foot"army unit - a military unit that is part of an army armed forces, armed services, military, military machine, war machine - the military forces of a nation; "their military is the largest in the region"; "the military machine is the same one we faced in 1991 but now it is weaker" paratroops - infantry trained and equipped to parachute | |
| 10. | foot - (prosody) a group of 2 or 3 syllables forming the basic unit of poetic rhythmdactyl - a metrical unit with stressed-unstressed-unstressed syllables amphibrach - a metrical unit with unstressed-stressed-unstressed syllables (e.g., `remember') trochee - a metrical unit with stressed-unstressed syllables spondee - a metrical unit with stressed-stressed syllables | |
| 11. | foot - a support resembling a pedal extremity; "one foot of the chair was on the carpet" leg - a cloth covering consisting of the part of a pair of trousers that covers a person's leg support - any device that bears the weight of another thing; "there was no place to attach supports for a shelf" | |
| Verb | 1. | foot - pay for something; "pick up the tab"; "pick up the burden of high-interest mortgages"; "foot the bill" pay - give money, usually in exchange for goods or services; "I paid four dollars for this sandwich"; "Pay the waitress, please" |
| 2. | foot - walk; "let's hoof it to the disco" colloquialism - a colloquial expression; characteristic of spoken or written communication that seeks to imitate informal speech walk - use one's feet to advance; advance by steps; "Walk, don't run!"; "We walked instead of driving"; "She walks with a slight limp"; "The patient cannot walk yet"; "Walk over to the cabinet" | |
| 3. | foot - add a column of numbers arithmetic - the branch of pure mathematics dealing with the theory of numerical calculations add together, add - make an addition by combining numbers; "Add 27 and 49, please!" |