- a sudden jarring impact; "the door closed with a jolt"; "all the jars and jolts were smoothed out by the shock absorbers"
- move or cause to move with a sudden jerky motion
- disturb (someone's) composure; "The audience was jolted by the play"
- jerk: an abrupt spasmodic movement
- (jolted) bumped or shaken jerkily; "the jolted passengers"
- (jolted) disturbed psychologically as if by a physical jolt or shock; "retrieved his named from her jolted memory"; "the accident left her badly shaken"
- (jolting) rough: causing or characterized by jolts and irregular movements; "a rough ride"
- Jolt (Helen "Hallie" Takahama) is a fictional character, a superheroine in the Marvel Universe and a member of the Thunderbolts and Young Allies.
- The Jolt were a Scottish band formed in Glasgow in 1976.
- (The Jolts) The Jolts are a Canadian punk rock group formed in Vancouver, BC in 2004 with a focus on playing relentless high-energy classic 1970s style punk rock.
- An act of jolting; A surprise or shock; a prison sentence; a narcotic injection; To push or shake abruptly and roughly; To knock sharply; to deal a blow to; To shock (someone) into taking action or being alert; as, to jolt someone out of complacency; To shock emotionally; To shake; to ...
- (Jolting) The effect caused by harsh clutch release. The car body jerks repeatedly in a longitudinal direction
- (Jolts) Moments in a media text that are generated by a broad comedy, a violent act, movement within a frame, a loud noise, rapid editing, a profanity or a sexually explicit representation, all of which are calculated to engage an audience's excitement.
- (Jolts) a term used by the commercial television industry to refer to moments of excitement generated by visual and/or aural techniques.
- A sudden jarring or jerking, as from a heavy blow or an abrupt movement.
- An enemy hit by this character?s attack is stunned (see that entry). That enemy can avoid this effect with a save of 11. Huge or larger characters ignore this effect.
- Being sentenced to penitentiary or to hard labor on a chain gang. (Term with two different origins: 1. Getting caught and sentenced to prison was like getting a “jolt” from an electric wire, and it was very shocking. ...
- A long sentence, as "I got a life jolt." Oppose to "bit."
- Java Online Transaction.
- (v) : to shake jerkily
- the rate of change of acceleration or rate of onset of accelerative forces.