| bolt | | |
| bolt, bolt of lightning, thunderbolt | (n.) | a discharge of lightning accompanied by thunder. |
| bolt | (n.) | a sliding bar in a breech-loading firearm that ejects an empty cartridge and replaces it and closes the breech. |
| bolt, deadbolt | (n.) | the part of a lock that is engaged or withdrawn with a key. |
| bolt, dash | (n.) | the act of moving with great haste.; "he made a dash for the door" |
| bolt | (n.) | a roll of cloth or wallpaper of a definite length. |
| bolt | (n.) | a screw that screws into a nut to form a fastener. |
| bolt | (n.) | a sudden abandonment (as from a political party). |
| bolt | (v.) | move or jump suddenly.; "She bolted from her seat" |
| bolt | (v.) | secure or lock with a bolt.; "bolt the door" |
| bolt | (v.) | swallow hastily. |
| abscond, absquatulate, bolt, decamp, go off, make off, run off | (v.) | 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" |
| beetle off, bolt, bolt out, run off, run out | (v.) | 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" |
| bolt, gobble | (v.) | eat hastily without proper chewing.; "Don't bolt your food!" |
| bolt | (v.) | make or roll into bolts.; "bolt fabric" |
| bolt, rigidly, stiffly | (adv.) | in a rigid manner.; "the body was rigidly erect"; "he sat bolt upright" |
| bang, bolt, slap, slapdash, smack | (adv.) | directly.; "he ran bang into the pole"; "ran slap into her" |
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