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
This ship has electromagnetic catapults (EMALS), new deck layouts, and new command-and-control systems.—Christopher McFadden, Interesting Engineering, 21 Dec. 2025 But the real catapult came with the arrival of Mickey Matthews.—Dana O’Neil, CNN Money, 19 Dec. 2025
Verb
And Katy Perry, one of six notable women catapulted to the edge of space, got a lot of it.—Amaris Encinas, USA Today, 27 Dec. 2025 The Peabody Award-winning show also catapulted the careers of Carell, John Krasinski, Mindy Kaling, Ed Helms and more.—Virginia Chamlee, PEOPLE, 26 Dec. 2025 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
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