Idioms for bolt

Origin of bolt

1
before 1000; Middle English (noun, v., and adv.), Old English (noun), cognate with Dutch bout, German Bolz

OTHER WORDS FROM bolt

bolt·er, noun bolt·less, adjective bolt·like, adjective

Definition for bolt (2 of 2)

bolt 2
[ bohlt ]
/ boʊlt /

verb (used with object)

to sift through a cloth or sieve.
to examine or search into, as if by sifting.

Origin of bolt

2
1150–1200; Middle English bulten < Old French bul(e)ter, metathetic variant of *buteler < Germanic; compare Middle High German biuteln to sift, derivative of biutel, Old High German būtil bag, whence German Beutel

OTHER WORDS FROM bolt

bolt·er, noun

Example sentences from the Web for bolt

British Dictionary definitions for bolt (1 of 3)

bolt 1
/ (bəʊlt) /

noun

verb

adverb

stiffly, firmly, or rigidly (archaic except in the phrase bolt upright)

Word Origin for bolt

Old English bolt arrow; related to Old High German bolz bolt for a crossbow

British Dictionary definitions for bolt (2 of 3)

bolt 2

boult

/ (bəʊlt) /

verb (tr)

to pass (flour, a powder, etc) through a sieve
to examine and separate

Derived forms of bolt

bolter or boulter, noun

Word Origin for bolt

C13: from Old French bulter, probably of Germanic origin; compare Old High German būtil bag

British Dictionary definitions for bolt (3 of 3)

Bolt
/ (bəʊlt) /

noun

Robert (Oxton). 1924–95, British playwright. His plays include A Man for All Seasons (1960) and he also wrote a number of screenplays
Usain (juːˈseɪn). born 1986, Jamaican athlete: winner of the 100 metres and the 200 metres in the 2008 Olympic Games, setting world records at both distances

Idioms and Phrases with bolt

bolt