Noun (1)
archaeologists were thrilled to discover an ancient vault that hadn't been looted by grave robbers Verb (2)vaulted over the obstacle with easeNoun (2)
a vault over the car's hood by the frightened deer
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Noun
The chaotic noise of Main Street traffic dissolves into the walls of this former bank vault, replaced by high-fidelity global sounds.—Nathanael Gassett, Bon Appetit Magazine, 30 Apr. 2026 Myrick, who also long and triple jumps, won the vault at 14-9, Logan was second at 14-3 and Parsons third at 13-9.—Steve Brand, San Diego Union-Tribune, 30 Apr. 2026
Verb
As soon as the news broke Saturday night that Breslow was cleaning house, Cora vaulted to the top of the list of best managerial candidates available.—Mac Cerullo, Boston Herald, 30 Apr. 2026 Brent futures, the benchmark index for global oil trading, vaulted as high as $126 a barrel, before dropping to $114 a barrel.—Max Zahn, ABC News, 30 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for vault
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English vaute, voute, borrowed from Anglo-French voute, volte, going back to Vulgar Latin *volvita "turn, arched structure," noun derivative from feminine of *volvitus, re-formation of Latin volūtus, past participle of volvere "to travel (a circular course), bring round, roll" — more at wallow entry 1
Verb (1)
Middle English vowten, borrowed from Anglo-French vouter, verbal derivative of voutevault entry 1
Verb (2)
probably borrowed from Middle French vouster "to turn about (on horseback), wheel, prance," going back to Vulgar Latin *volvitāre, frequentative of Latin volvere "to travel (a circular course), bring round, roll" — more at wallow entry 1