Bolt in a sentence as a noun

" You can't just bolt it on later.

And I didn't know that HN readers were supposed to all be cut from the same bolt of cloth.

For example, the C doesn't normally have a lighting bolt through it.

For me, it came as a bolt from the sky, obviously radical and brilliant.

""Bicycles shouldn't have locks; there are bolt cutters with five-foot handles, aren't there?!

Bolt in a sentence as a verb

They are a known quantity AND they have enough loyalty that they probably won't bolt the instant they are able.

Growing up during the cold war, it was dogma that a Soviet "bolt from the blue" could occur at any moment and end everything, everywhere.

"Me: "Well, I had a bolt that really didn't want to come loose, so I had a six foot cheater bar and I was bouncing my whole weight on it when suddenly it exploded.

If you got hit by lightning, your colleagues would find a way to replace you; if you get hit by a bolt of inspiration and run off to win a Nobel prize, the same applies.

You don't see non-technical hospital managers going around telling doctors where to place an incision and you don't see non-technical aerospace management telling engineers what bolt to use in a rocket engine.

Bolt in a sentence as an adverb

While we're on Dorm Room Modification stories...A buddy of mine lived in one of those extra cheap campus dorms where each room is a mirror image of itself with a bed and desk against each wall with a bookshelf bolted to the wall above.

Look, we can bolt training wheels to embedded!This is all fun for sparking creativity, but it always seems like a massive diss to the EE's in the crowd when web devs run around fronting that they are going to disrupt the embedded world with their transpiled bloatware.

In practice, go and ask anybody in the country outside of the military for the following:- An M10 bolt- a 16mm wrench to drive it with- a 3 meter long 50 mm od pvc drainpipe- a tape-measure that measures only in metric- a highway sign that is posted in kmAnd so on.

A sudden terror and suspicion of what it loved, a lightning-bolt of contempt for what it called 'duty', a rebellious, arbitrary, volcanically erupting desire for travel, strange places, estrangements, coldness, soberness, frost, a hatred of love, perhaps a desecrating blow and glance backwards to where it formerly loved and worshipped.-- Nietzsche

Bolt definitions

noun

a discharge of lightning accompanied by thunder

See also: thunderbolt

noun

a sliding bar in a breech-loading firearm that ejects an empty cartridge and replaces it and closes the breech

noun

the part of a lock that is engaged or withdrawn with a key

See also: deadbolt

noun

the act of moving with great haste; "he made a dash for the door"

See also: dash

noun

a roll of cloth or wallpaper of a definite length

noun

a screw that screws into a nut to form a fastener

noun

a sudden abandonment (as from a political party)

verb

move or jump suddenly; "She bolted from her seat"

verb

secure or lock with a bolt; "bolt the door"

verb

swallow hastily

verb

run away; usually includes taking something or somebody along; "The thief made off with our silver"; "the accountant absconded with the cash from the safe"

See also: abscond absquatulate decamp

verb

leave suddenly and as if in a hurry; "The listeners bolted when he discussed his strange ideas"; "When she started to tell silly stories, I ran out"

verb

eat hastily without proper chewing; "Don't bolt your food!"

See also: gobble

verb

make or roll into bolts; "bolt fabric"

adverb

in a rigid manner; "the body was rigidly erect"; "he sat bolt upright"

See also: rigidly stiffly

adverb

directly; "he ran bang into the pole"; "ran slap into her"

See also: bang slap slapdash smack