So someone else who doesn't understand that words have meaning and you can't just start throwing them around without care?
Reboot has a specific meaning and two forms: Hard and soft. Reboots are when you discard pre-existing continuity and start a new. Hard reboots like Ghostbusters 2016 (and it is a reboot not a remake as there is no attempt being done in GB 16 to retell GB 84) are done completely outside the narrative, the creative team goes this is a new universe and we move on. Soft reboots are sometimes done within the narrative and can be as drastic as Star Trek 09 where they made the idiotic decision to have their young crew universe created by actions in the prime universe and thus having their cake and shitting on it too. Or it can be as simple as just cutting out certain continuity while keeping other stuff. Superman Returns throws out parts III and IV, Jurassic World might count if (haven't seen it) if it ignores Lost world and III, and that Neill Blomkamp Alien sequel would have been an example as well but that's never happening.
The key to a fucking reboot of any kind is that continuity changes (and don't you dare tell me that it counts because they dropped much of the EU), TFA does none of that and in fact excitedly references events from both trilogies.
That it has at it's bare bones a similar plot structure to ANH does not make it a reboot of any kind. I mean hell by that logic Mission Impossible reboots itself almost every time because each one is by in large a similar plot structure with different set and action pieces and doesn't really rely on previous films, but that's stupid because they are sequels.
What TFA is, and I borrow this from comics (well I'm sure not just comics), is a jumping on point, it's designed in such a way that it can be the first Star Wars movie for people, but that does not make it a reboot, it makes JJ and co smart fucking creators to have designed a movie that gives old fans what is good for them while allowing new fans to jump on board and be inspired to watch the OT.
So yeah not Star Wars Part 7 (incidentally the first movie whose order of release number and Episode number are the same) is not a soft reboot of anything, nor is it a remake, anymore than Into Darkness was a remake of Wrath of Khan (and it fucking wasn't)
Too late, I'm too far gone