Verb
They catapulted rocks toward the castle.
The publicity catapulted her CD to the top of the charts.
The novel catapulted him from unknown to best-selling author.
He catapulted to fame after his first book was published.
Her career was catapulting ahead.
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Noun
Popular across Europe between roughly 1350 and 1600, the ballistics could be fired from not only mechanical catapults and trebuchets, but explosive cannons.—Andrew Paul, Popular Science, 29 Apr. 2026 Redesigns, better engines, and improved stealth and aerodynamics culminated in its first catapult launch test in 2021.—Christopher McFadden, Interesting Engineering, 25 Apr. 2026
Verb
The pairing with Uncle Waffles is a smart one, as the artistis arguably seen as the face of mainstream amapiano, while Asake’s own unique blend of Afrobeats, fuji music, and amapiano helped catapult him onto the music scene.—Emanuel Okusanya, Variety, 26 May 2026 The purse further catapulted to fame when the now-royal used one to shield her first pregnancy, as captured by Life magazine.—Lily Templeton, Footwear News, 26 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for catapult
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle French or Latin; Middle French catapulte, from Latin catapulta, from Greek katapaltēs, from kata- + pallein to hurl