noun, adjective, verb, -strapped, -strap⋅ping.| 1. | a loop of leather or cloth sewn at the top rear, or sometimes on each side, of a boot to facilitate pulling it on. |
| 2. | a means of advancing oneself or accomplishing something: He used his business experience as a bootstrap to win voters. |
| 3. | relying entirely on one's efforts and resources: The business was a bootstrap operation for the first ten years. |
| 4. | self-generating or self-sustaining: a bootstrap process. |
| 5. | Computers. boot 1 (def. 23). |
| 6. | to help (oneself) without the aid of others: She spent years bootstrapping herself through college. |
| 7. | pull oneself up by one's bootstraps, to help oneself without the aid of others; use one's resources: I admire him for pulling himself up by his own bootstraps. |
| 1. | a covering of leather, rubber, or the like, for the foot and all or part of the leg. |
| 2. | Chiefly British. any shoe or outer foot covering reaching to the ankle. |
| 3. | an overshoe, esp. one of rubber or other waterproof material. |
| 4. | an instrument of torture for the leg, consisting of a kind of vise extending from the knee to the ankle, tightened around the leg by means of screws. |
| 5. | any sheathlike protective covering: a boot for a weak automobile tire. |
| 6. | a protective covering for the foot and part of the leg of a horse. |
| 7. | a protecting cover or apron for the driver's seat of an open vehicle. |
| 8. | the receptacle or place into which the top of a convertible car fits when lowered. |
| 9. | a cloth covering for this receptacle or place. |
| 10. | British. the trunk of an automobile. |
| 11. | a rubber covering for the connection between each spark-plug terminal and ignition cable in an automotive ignition system. |
| 12. | Also called Denver boot. a metal device attached to the wheel of a parked car so that it cannot be driven away until a fine is paid or the owner reports to the police: used by police to catch scofflaws. |
| 13. | U.S. Navy, Marines. a recruit. |
| 14. | Music. the box that holds the reed in the reed pipe of an organ. |
| 15. | a kick. |
| 16. | Slang. a dismissal; discharge: They gave him the boot for coming in late. |
| 17. | Informal. a sensation of pleasure or amusement: Watching that young skater win a gold medal gave me a real boot. |
| 18. | Baseball. a fumble of a ball batted on the ground, usually to the infield. |
| 19. | to kick; drive by kicking: The boy booted a tin can down the street. |
| 20. | Football. to kick. |
| 21. | Baseball. to fumble (a ground ball). |
| 22. | to put boots on; equip or provide with boots. |
| 23. | Also, bootstrap. Computers.
|
| 24. | Slang. to dismiss; discharge: They booted him out of school for not studying. |
| 25. | to attach a Denver boot to: Police will boot any car with unpaid fines. |
| 26. | to torture with the boot. |
| 27. | bet your boots, to be sure or certain: You can bet your boots that I'll be there! |
| 28. | die with one's boots on,
|
| 29. | get a boot, Informal. to derive keen enjoyment: I really got a boot out of his ridiculous stories. |

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Bootstrapping
A procedure used to calculate the zero coupon yield curve from market figures.
Investopedia Commentary
Since the T-bills offered by the government are not available for every time period, the bootstrapping method is used to fill in the missing figures in order to derive the yield curve. The bootstrap method uses interpolation to determine the yields for Treasury zero coupon securities with various maturities.
Related Links
Advanced Bond Concepts
Bond Basics Tutorial
See also: Bond, Interpolation, Maturity, Yield, Yield to Maturity, Zero Coupon Bond
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