Verb (1)
I bolted as I read the winning lottery numbers
the cat bolted for the food dish the minute he spied it
the rabbit bolted when it saw the fox approaching bolted out the cuss word without thinking
the way you bolted those hot dogs, it's no wonder you're feeling a little queasy Adverb
She sat bolt upright, staring straight ahead.
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Noun
According to Krag-Arnold, sport climbing almost exclusively uses bolts as protection, as opposed to traditional removable climbing gear.—
Sofia Williams,
Sacbee.com,
30 June 2026 Insert the bolt in the sleeve and fill in the area around it with concrete.—
Tribune Content Agency,
Baltimore Sun,
29 June 2026
Verb
Against Seattle, the Storm bolted to a 21-13 lead after one quarter and held firm from there.—
Christopher Harris,
CBS News,
1 July 2026 JPMorgan has topped the Evident AI maturity index for four consecutive years, not by bolting chatbots onto existing systems, but by treating AI as an organization-wide transformation rather than a series of isolated pilots.—
Bernard Marr,
Forbes.com,
1 July 2026 See All Example Sentences for bolt
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English, from Old English; akin to Old High German bolz crossbow bolt, and perhaps to Lithuanian beldėti to beat
Verb (2)
Middle English bulten, from Anglo-French buleter, of Germanic origin; akin to Middle High German biuteln to sift, from biutel bag, from Old High German būtil
First Known Use
Noun (1)
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1b