November 27, 2010, 10:47
GeoffBolt
Are all the different meanings of "bolt" related? A workmate recently used it to mean a crossbow's projectile; Zeus chucked thunderbolts, drapers use bolts of cloth, I use bolts to fasten things together, and there's a bolt that blocks the breech in my rifle. Any other meanings I've missed?
November 27, 2010, 11:00
goofyAll the meanings you mention are related. There's also the verb with meanings including "to start, spring; to dart forth; to run to see prematurely; to break away from a political party." This was derived from the noun.
There's also
bolt, boult "to sift; to pass through a sieve or bolting-cloth" and
bolt, boult "a flour-sieve" which have a different etymology.
November 27, 2010, 21:44
KallehThe OED adds these definitions:
Wood in special size for cleaving into laths.
Bookbinding. The fold at the top and front edge of a folded sheet.
And of course, you bolt food down when you're really hungry.
November 28, 2010, 06:07
arnieThen there's the bolt you make for the door after bolting your food.
November 28, 2010, 10:42
Geoffquote:
Originally posted by arnie:
Then there's the bolt you make for the door after bolting your food.
Which might be problematic if the door is bolted.