English edit

Etymology edit

From fore- +‎ booth. Compare Scots forebuith.

Noun edit

forebooth (plural forebooths)

  1. A booth positioned near the front; foreshop
    • 1895, The Scottish Antiquary: Or, Northern Notes & Queries:
      The instrument concludes with the statement that these things were 'done in the forebooth of the tenement or lodging [...].'
    • 2003, David Iredale, Discovering Local History:
      This might be rebuilt with permission, or on payment of a fine (set down in borough archives), as a permanent shop or forebooth perhaps, with an unglazed window to the street.
    • 2004, Ayr and its People:
      Helen Dunbar had the liferent of this booth (described as a forebooth with a foreshop adjacent) and died about 1605.
    • 2011, Kathy Lynn Emerson, Face Down o'er the Border:
      He also had the forebooth on the south side and the pentice below the outside stairs.