In answer to the question itself, I don't see the need to add anything more verbose to the conjunction tags. I do think they should be cleaned up to be consistent. (e.g. twitter-bootstrap-tooltip should become bootstrap-tooltip)
There's also the issue that twitter-bootstrap no longer refers to itself formally as such, having dropped the "twitter" portion except where it continues to persist as a seemingly more and more deprecated holdover. While it's still owned and licensed by Twitter, direct references to that seem to have largely been scrubbed from its own pages other than in the license itself. Most people I know who are just getting started with Bootstrap have to have the Twitter connection pointed out/explained to them, these days. They just know it (rightly or not) as "Bootstrap," not "Twitter Bootstrap."
Alphabetically (yes, I know, who does that? still…) most newer designers/devs are probably going to be looking in the 'b's, not the 't's, for anything related.
Between the fact that bootstrap by and large is understood to refer to the framework more than anything else (see below the <hr>), I think the added specificity in the conjunction tags is going to be easily understood to be within the context of the web framework for nearly all of the ones listed. There are at best one or two of those that might be very slightly ambiguous if we didn't start from that premise, but again, I think the shift in the general usage of "bootstrap" probably pairs that down to an absolute minimum.
As much as I'm for clarity in tagging, I'm not sure there's a need for added length in those conjunction tags: I have a feeling they're clear enough as they need to be as such.
This started as a comment in the thread on @Tanner's answer, but went beyond that context. Consider it a corollary to @Tanner's answer.
The ultimate point of any tagging system is semantic clarity. If we start from there (including looking at actual observed usage as @Tanner did), then I think this becomes relatively straightforward.
bootstrapping (or its corollary: bootstrapper) is as unambiguous in what it refers to as possible, in a programming/software design context. More importantly, it fairly explicitly refers to a related design pattern (since it is directly based on the more general/business/colloquial language use that fits to/inspired that same pattern).
bootstrap is now, to me, relatively ambiguous in "general" programming related work, and in broader contexts (see: google results of each term) is nearly always colloquially (or technically, in web specific contexts) going to be understood now as referring to the associated framework. Fighting drift in colloquial language is fairly pointless, and since the associated drift is creeping into technical definitions/field specific jargon, it's probably time to look forward on this instead of back. I would personally immediately assume anything tagged with bootstrap and any other web related tag was intended to refer to the framework, not the generalized concept.
So in addition to @Tanner's empirical evidence based argument, I would also say that as a matter of semantic clarity and precision, bootstrapping should be used to refer to the software/design concept of employing a bootstrapper (and related problems), and bootstrap should at best be used to refer to the web framework, if it isn't simply burnt (I would personally prefer bootstrap-framework, or something similar to be used instead so as to remain as unambiguous as possible on the exact topic it's meant to refer to—even the now somewhat less apparent to all twitter-bootstrap would be better).
As a personal aside, using bootstrap to refer to a bootstrapping or at best bootstrapper question would have felt very unwieldy to me. That intermediate shortening (between the full wording of "Bootstrapping/Bootstrapper/Bootloader" and the most paired down form of "Boot") is one I honestly haven't heard used much in that context with anyone I personally talk to. If I was looking for answers related to bootstrapping coding issues, I wouldn't personally have looked at the bootstrap tag. The plural of anecdote isn't data, but I think @Tanner's empirical work and search results from google tend to point to that not being a completely uncommon viewpoint, at least.