johlt]
| 1. | to jar, shake, or cause to move by or as if by a sudden rough thrust; shake up roughly: The bus jolted its passengers as it went down the rocky road. |
| 2. | to knock sharply so as to dislodge: He jolted the nail free with a stone. |
| 3. | to stun with a blow, esp. in boxing. |
| 4. | to shock emotionally or psychologically: His sudden death jolted us all. |
| 5. | to bring to a desired state sharply or abruptly: to jolt a person into awareness. |
| 6. | to make active or alert, as by using an abrupt, sharp, or rough manner: to jolt someone's memory. |
| 7. | to interfere with or intrude upon, esp. in a rough or crude manner; interrupt disturbingly. |
| 8. | to move with a sharp jerk or a series of sharp jerks: The car jolted to a halt. |
| 9. | a jolting shock, movement, or blow: The automobile gave a sudden jolt. |
| 10. | an emotional or psychological shock: The news of his arrest gave me quite a jolt. |
| 11. | something that causes such a shock: The news was a jolt to me. |
| 12. | a sudden, unexpected rejection or defeat: Their policy got a rude jolt from the widespread opposition. |
| 13. | Slang. a prison sentence. |
| 14. | Slang. an injection of a narcotic. |
| 15. | a bracing dose of something: a jolt of whiskey; a jolt of fresh air. |

jolt (jōlt) v. jolt·ed, jolt·ing, jolts v. tr.
To proceed in an irregular, bumpy, or jerky fashion. n.
[Origin unknown.] jolt'er n., jolt'i·ly adv., jolt'y adj. |
jolt
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