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 jolt [dʒolt]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 震摇, 摇动, 颠簸

vi. 颠簸而行, 震摇

vt. 使颠簸, 使慌张, 猛击

[机] 震动


  1. The news of the accident gave her an unpleasant jolt.
    她听到出事的消息吃了一惊。
  2. The car stopped with a jolt.
    汽车停止时震动了一下。


jolt
[ noun ]
  1. a sudden jarring impact

  2. <noun.event>
    the door closed with a jolt
    all the jars and jolts were smoothed out by the shock absorbers
  3. an abrupt spasmodic movement

  4. <noun.act>
[ verb ]
  1. move or cause to move with a sudden jerky motion

  2. <verb.motion> jar
  3. disturb (someone's) composure

  4. <verb.emotion>
    The audience was jolted by the play


Jolt \Jolt\, v. t.
1. To cause to move with a sudden motion, especially an up
and down motion, as in a carriage going over rough ground,
or on a high-trotting horse; as, the horse jolts the
rider; fast driving jolts the carriage and the passengers.

2. To stun or shock a person physically, as with a blow or
electrical shock; as, the earthquake jolted him out of
bed.
[PJC]

3. To stun or shock or change the mental state of (a person)
suddenly, as if with a blow; as, the sight of the house on
fire jolted him into action; his mother's early death
jolted his idyllic happiness.
[PJC]


Jolt \Jolt\, n.
1. A sudden shock or jerk; a jolting motion, as in a carriage
moving over rough ground.

The first jolt had like to have shaken me out.
--Swift.

2. A physical or psychological shock; see {jolt} v. t. senses
2 and 3; as, the stock market plunge was a big jolt to his
sense of affluence; he touched the casing of the
ungrounded motor and got a jolt from a short inside.
[PJC]

3. Something which causes a {jolt}[2]; as, the bad news was a
jolt.
[PJC]


Jolt \Jolt\ (j[=o]lt), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Jolted}; p. pr. &
vb. n. Jolting.] [Prob. fr. jole, joll, jowl, and orig.
meaning, to knock on the head. See {Jowl}.]
To shake with short, abrupt risings and fallings, as a
carriage moving on rough ground; as, the coach jolts.

  1. First Boston Corp.'s merger department suffered a jolt to its prestige as Farmers Group Inc. hired archrival Morgan Stanley & Co. to assist Farmers in defending a proposed takeover by Batus Inc.
  2. Meanwhile, London share prices dropped sharply on the jolt that President Bush's political standing took in the New Hampshire primary election, and Frankfurt stocks eased on profit-taking.
  3. Yesterday's jolt doesn't necessarily mean that the dollar has started a full-fledged tailspin after a long period of gradual decline.
  4. All the good news was in sharp contrast to the jolt financial markets recieved a month ago when the February trade report was issued.
  5. His supporters recognized that anything less than a victory in Minnesota would jolt his effort to prove he could win outside the Northeast.
  6. In Anchorage, William Tobin had just parked his car outside the new J.C. Penney Building when he felt a jolt.
  7. Eveready Battery Co., aiming to jolt the consumer battery competition, said it developed the first AA 1.5-volt lithium battery for consumer use.
  8. Patinella's wife suffered burns on her arms from the hot grease that sloshed from the fryer, and Patinella wrenched his back in the sudden jolt.
  9. It threatened to seriously jolt his government just as opposition politicians have boycotted the National Assembly demanding broader democratic reforms.
  10. The market got an initial jolt of support from lower energy prices and higher bond prices, triggered by President Bush's announcement Wednesday that he will sell 5 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
  11. "It was reported as being a very sharp jolt but lasting only a second," said dispatcher Ray Roe in Independence, 15 miles to the north.
  12. But the teams that did raise ticket prices did so with a jolt.
  13. The bond market's recent siesta ended with a jolt yesterday as government reports indicated the economy is growing at a slightly faster clip than many analysts expected.
  14. We wanted more visibility in the US and Canada,' Mr Olliver said. From a personal perspective, the relocation order was more of a jolt.
  15. Many analysts say a May trade deficit of more than $12 billion would jolt the foreign exchange markets and lead to sharply lower bond prices.
  16. The end result, however, is an important jolt to the old chronology of the collapse of Mayan civilisation in Central America. It now seems that the Mayans did not suddenly vanish.
  17. It will look better when the Canalettos return. Having lulled the visitor into a dreamy acceptance of the luxurious the tour ends with a jolt in the finest and happiest rooms, all designed by Nash, with plenty of quirky detail.
  18. If Mr. Cohen is right, the unadjusted December number will really jolt the markets when it is released next month.
  19. An increase last Thursday in key West German interest rates sent a brief jolt through the stock market.
  20. "That doesn't mean it necessarily has to go through a severe jolt," he said, but it does suggest that stocks are likely to need time to consolidate after their recent rally.
  21. Several fund groups worry that large holders can jolt a fund by switching big asset pools during times of market change.
  22. Taster's Choice to McCann McCann-Erickson got a much-needed jolt of caffeine yesterday, winning the $25 million Taster's Choice instant coffee account from Nestle Foods Corp., a unit of Nestle S.A.
  23. "We felt a big jolt and things started shaking pretty good," she said.
  24. Callers from San Bernardino and from Idyllwild, in the San Jacinto Mountains, also reported feeling the jolt.
  25. The formation of a Pounds 500m partnership between his Quantum Fund and British Land was enough to jolt the UK property sector's stock market value into a 6 per cent increase.
  26. That, brokers say, helped insulate stock prices in the United States from the jolt of a sharp selloff on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
  27. The bill approved in the Senate on Thursday would jolt the nation's candidate-selection process.
  28. Medicus, garbed in a leather apron, leather gloves and a face shield for protection, will send a 110-volt jolt to the electrodes, exploding the wire.
  29. There was a short jolt in Sydney but the temblor lasted 45 seconds in some places; Newcastle and the adjoining Hunter Valley wine growing region were hardest hit.
  30. In nearby Palm Desert, Mary Jo Lyon said the mirror on her bedroom wall shook and she ran from the room to check on her Christmas tree, which listed to one side after the jolt.
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