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
An unusual structural failure recently caused a dramatic, sinkhole-like collapse in an historic English churchyard — revealing a 300-year-old family vault.—Andrea Margolis, FOXNews.com, 26 Nov. 2025 But a vault filled with every shade Summer Fridays has ever dreamed up?—Brittany Talarico, PEOPLE, 24 Nov. 2025
Verb
Lamine Yamal was doing this… A bit of sorcery that helped Spain vault to victory over France and eventually to the European title.—Jon Wertheim, CBS News, 1 Dec. 2025 Piastri’s superior pace was enough to vault him ahead of Carlos Sainz and Kimi Antonelli to get back to second after his second stop, which had been brought forward in a futile attempt to hunt down Verstappen at the front.—Luke Smith, New York Times, 1 Dec. 2025 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
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