It means that a situation has reversed itself and the person who was previously at an advantage has been left at an uncomfortable disadvantage - as would be the case if they put their boots (or any footwear) on the wrong feet.
This idiom means that a situation has reversed, with the roles or circumstances changing from what they were before. It is used to describe when the position of power or advantage shifts to the other person or party involved.
The boot! The boot!The boot! The boot!
The boot was a medieval torture system. a foot was placed in a metal boot and wooden wedges were hammered in.
Break a foot
It depend but probably a month or so. The boot should be worn because it helps the foot heal.
A boot is worn on the foot.
Maybe you need a bigger size of boot... which may be the reason your foot hurts in the first place.
Cut off your foot.
Foot gets sweaty
yes
A boot covers the entire foot, as well as the ankle and sometimes more of the leg. Boot generally refers to sturdy, supportive footwear.
It's shoe - "The shoe is on the other foot."
No. A steel shank is a piece of metal along the sole of the boot which provides support for your foot. The Steel toe of course is a shell around the front of your foot protecting from dropped hammers or anything along that line.