Noun (1)
archaeologists were thrilled to discover an ancient vault that hadn't been looted by grave robbers Verb (2)vaulted over the obstacle with easeNoun (2)
a vault over the car's hood by the frightened deer
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Noun
The Bruins needed a strong performance on vault to claim the conference title.—Anthony Solorzano, Los Angeles Times, 28 Feb. 2026 Unlike gold stocks or gold ETFs, physical gold requires somewhere safe to live, whether that's a home safe, a bank vault or a third-party depository.—Angelica Leicht, CBS News, 27 Feb. 2026
Verb
If not for the war, Democrats would probably not have vaulted Barack Obama, who campaigned on his anti-war stance, to the presidential nomination in 2008.—Jason Willick, Washington Post, 27 Feb. 2026 Analysts at Goldman Sachs raised their price target, noting that the cuts would vault Block from middle of the pack to near the top in fintech workforce productivity.—Mackenzie Sigalos, CNBC, 27 Feb. 2026 See All Example Sentences for vault
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English vaute, voute, borrowed from Anglo-French voute, volte, going back to Vulgar Latin *volvita "turn, arched structure," noun derivative from feminine of *volvitus, re-formation of Latin volūtus, past participle of volvere "to travel (a circular course), bring round, roll" — more at wallow entry 1
Verb (1)
Middle English vowten, borrowed from Anglo-French vouter, verbal derivative of voutevault entry 1
Verb (2)
probably borrowed from Middle French vouster "to turn about (on horseback), wheel, prance," going back to Vulgar Latin *volvitāre, frequentative of Latin volvere "to travel (a circular course), bring round, roll" — more at wallow entry 1