bolt / boʊlt /

💦中学词汇螺栓螺栓连接闩上

bolt4 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a movable bar or rod that when slid into a socket fastens a door, gate, etc.
  2. the part of a lock that is shot from and drawn back into the case, as by the action of the key.
  3. any of several types of strong fastening rods, pins, or screws, usually threaded to receive a nut.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to fasten with or as with a bolt.
  2. to discontinue support of or participation in; break with: to bolt a political party.
  3. to shoot or discharge, as from a crossbow or catapult.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to make a sudden, swift dash, run, flight, or escape; spring away suddenly: The rabbit bolted into its burrow.
  2. to break away, as from one's political party.
  3. to eat hurriedly or without chewing.
  4. Horticulture. to produce flowers or seeds prematurely.
adv. 副词 adverb
  1. Archaic. with sudden meeting or collision; suddenly.

bolt 近义词

n. 名词 noun

flash; projectile

bolt 的近义词 7
bolt 的反义词 1
n. 名词 noun

large roll of material

bolt 的近义词 7
bolt 的反义词 1
n. 名词 noun

lock; part of lock

v. 动词 verb

run quickly away

v. 动词 verb

fasten securely

v. 动词 verb

eat very fast

bolt构成的短语

  • bolt from the blue, a
  • bolt upright
  • nuts and bolts
  • shoot one's bolt

更多bolt例句

  1. Over the course of 72 hours, around 11,000 bolts of lightning touched down across central California, starting 367 wildfires.
  2. Strangely, the smaller bolts appeared to come from just 18 kilometers below the cloud tops, where it’s too cold for liquid water to exist alone.
  3. The only components that aren’t 3D printed are the actuators, tendons, electronics, batteries, sensors, and the nuts and bolts.
  4. The record distance for a lightning flash goes to a bolt on October 31, 2018.
  5. Meanwhile, a lightning bolt on October 31, 2018, set the new record for length.
  6. Like any high-powered attorney who charges $100,000 for a retainer, Bolt always seems to be one step ahead of the competition.
  7. But when member organizations started to bolt, the WCF finally caved.
  8. But for once we see something new: The singer reloads the bolt of his machine-gun in time with the music.
  9. Ardie would bolt into the club with a huge smile and energy to match, raring to get on stage.
  10. Setting up the company “came to me as a lightning bolt last summer,” Lear tells me.
  11. Mrs. Ducksmith, who had sat with overwhelmed head in her hands, started bolt upright, and looked at him like one thunderstruck.
  12. "Take some melon, Mr. Mudge," said we, as with a sudden bolt we recovered our speech and took another slice ourself.
  13. "Some one has lost their way on the heath," said Dorothy, laying her hand upon the strong iron bolt that secured the door.
  14. Susy, who had been awake, had heard the alarm and drawn the bolt so as to give time for hastily throwing on a few garments.
  15. But failure to lock or bolt his door is not necessarily negligence on the part of a guest.