英:['dʒəʊltɪ]
美:['dʒoʊltɪ]
英:['dʒəʊltɪ]
美:['dʒoʊltɪ]
noun
an abrupt, sharp, jerky blow or movement
awoke with a jolt
a sudden feeling of shock, surprise, or disappointment
the news gave them a jolt
a serious setback or reverse
a severe financial jolt
a small but potent or bracing portion of something
a jolt of horseradish
verb
transitive verb
to disturb the composure of : shock an announcement that jolted the community
crudely jolted out of that mood—Virginia Woolf
to interfere with roughly, abruptly, and disconcertingly
determination to pursue his own course was jolted badly—F. L. Paxson
to cause to move with a sudden jerky motion
passengers being jolted along a bumpy road
to give a knock or blow tospecifically: to jar with a quick or hard blow
intransitive verb
to move with a sudden jerky motion
Verb and Noun probably blend of obsolete joll to strike and jot to bump
The first known use of jolt was in 1596
Josuenoun
joshua
Joshuanoun
a mainly narrative book of canonical Jewish and Christian Scripture see bible
Jonathannoun
any of a variety of red-skinned apple
Jonahnoun
a narrative book of canonical Jewish and Christian Scripture see bible
jolt1 of 2verb
to give a quick hard blow to : jar
to move jerkily
jolt2 of 2noun
a sudden jarring blow or movement
a sudden shock or surprise
1 Maybe, though, you’ll find it a bit jolty riding, at first.
2 All around me the JumboTrons blare their colorful campaigns, the sound of their ads distorted and jolty from the city speakers.
3 More interesting than the back-and-forth between the campaigns was the jolt of energy that the news provided to one of the most boring presidential contests on record.
4 He was jolted forward when the bus stopped suddenly.
5 I am now fairly entitled to the reputation of being a jolty rhymster.
6 But the jolty nature of his buzzing left another wondering if someone had "rigged all the buzzers to give Leo an electric shock".
7 I sprang out of bed with a jolt.
8 He lay listening dreamily to the jolty clatter of the wagons, the shouts of the drivers, and the commotion of the animals in the menagerie cages.
9 She jolted the medical world with her announcement.
10 The attack jolted the country into action.
11 He had to stop giving the Kid jolty rides on his knees,—but that was because the Kid was getting too big for baby play, the Old Man declared.
12 The explosion jolted the ship.
13 He had told the girl that, on the long, jolty ride from the junction.
14 The unexpected praise he received gave him a jolt of confidence.
15 He was knocked to the canvas backwards, and sideways, was punched in the clinches and in the breakaways—stiff, jolty blows that dazed his brain and drove the strength from his muscles.
16 At the moment he is attempting to wriggle himself into his trousers the horse is hitched-to again, and the jerky and jolty journey back up the beach begins.
17 The runaway, reality-biting Young Adult book by John Green had taken Penguin and tens of millions of readers for a long enough, jolty ride.
18 "With great pleasure, Mr. Fairfield," replied Nan; "and please appreciate my amiability, for I think they're most jolty and uncomfortable things to ride in."
19 He was knocked against the walls of the room, and hammered away from them with stiff, jolty, venomous blows that jarred him from head to heels.
20 The defeat was quite a jolt to the team.
1 摇晃
rocky shaky cranky rickety roll sway jolt lurch rock falter staggering shaken faltering tippy jiggly rackety jouncy stagger swag bicker jounce wabble wamble play dance tremble dodder