bullet

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
8
Words With Friends
12
Letters
6
Pronunciation
/ˈbʊlɪt/
See all 4 pronunciations
/ˈbʊlɪt/ · /ˈbɵlɪt/ · /ˈbʊlət/ · /ˈbʉlɪt/

Definition of bullet

26 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)A projectile, usually of metal, shot from a gun at high speed.
See all 26 definitions

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)A projectile, usually of metal, shot from a gun at high speed.
  2. (countable, informal, uncountable)An entire round of unfired ammunition for a firearm, including the projectile, the cartridge casing, the propellant charge, etc.
  3. (countable, uncountable)Ammunition for a sling or slingshot which has been manufactured for such use.
    “Then when our powers in points of ſwords are ioin’d / And cloſde in compaſſe of the killing bullet, / Though ſtraite the paſſage and the port be made, / That leads to Pallace of my brothers life, / Proud is his fortune if we pierce it not.”
  4. (countable, uncountable)A printed symbol in the form of a solid circle ⟨•⟩, often used to mark items in a list.
  5. (countable, uncountable)A large scheduled repayment of the principal of a loan; a balloon payment.
  6. (countable, uncountable)A rejection letter, as for employment, admission to a school or a competition.
    “John's not going to any of his top schools; he got a bullet from the last of them yesterday.”
  7. (countable, slang, uncountable)One year of prison time.
    “G.T.A. I got sentenced to a bullet, did six months at fire camp and got a modification.”
  8. (countable, slang, uncountable)An ace (the playing card).
    “The miser, a-seeking lost gelt, / The doughboy, awaiting the battle, / May possibly know how I felt / While the long years dragged by as the dealer / As slow as the slowest of dubs, / Stuck out the last helping of tickets / 'Till I lifted—the Bullet of Clubs!”
  9. (countable, figuratively, uncountable)Anything that is projected extremely fast.
    “Just as it appeared Arsenal had taken the sting out of the tie, Johnson produced a moment of outrageous quality, thundering a bullet of a left foot shot out of the blue and into the top left-hand corner of Wojciech Szczesny's net with the Pole grasping at thin air.”
  10. (attributive, countable, uncountable)Very fast (speedy).
    “bullet train”
    “bullet chess”
  11. (abbreviation, alt-of, ellipsis, uncountable)Ellipsis of bullet chess.
    “Nakamura is a different animal at 15-minute rapid and five-minute blitz and even more so at one-minute bullet, and in this match he adopted a psychological approach which paid off brilliantly.”
    “Carlsen also has been engaging in online marathons of "bullet chess," exactly the kind of attention-disrupting, energy-draining stunt contenders are supposed to avoid. In a bullet game, each player has only one minute for all the moves. The pace is so rapid the games are hard to watch, much less play.”
    “Even today, when they're home, the siblings indulge in a friendly game or two. "We love playing bullet games. It's a format where we make really quick moves," he says, pausing to add, "Think of it like a super over in cricket."”
  12. (countable, uncountable)A plumb or sinker.
  13. (Ireland, countable, uncountable)The heavy projectile thrown in a game of road bowling.
  14. (Australia, countable, uncountable)A roughly bullet-shaped sweet consisting of a cylinder of liquorice covered in chocolate.
  15. (countable, obsolete, uncountable)A small ball.
    “Would you not suppose these persons had been whispered, by the Master of the Ceremonies, the promise of some momentous destiny? and that this lukewarm bullet on which they play their farces was the bull's-eye and centrepoint of all the universe?”
  16. (countable, obsolete, uncountable)A cannonball.
    “A ship before Greenwich […] shot off her ordinance, one piece being charged with a bullet of stone.”
  17. (countable, obsolete, uncountable)The fetlock of a horse.
  18. (Canada, US, countable, uncountable)The best workout time at a track on a given day at a specific distance, traditionally marked by a printer's bullet.
  19. (countable, uncountable)A notation used on pop music charts to indicate that a song is climbing in the rankings.
    “I'm eighteen with a bullet / Got my finger on the trigger, I'm gonna pull it / […] / I'm high on the chart / I'm tip for the top”
    “Her third release hit number one in record time — “number one with a bullet” as they said in the industry — and after that, there seemed to be no stopping her.”
  20. (abbreviation, alt-of, countable, ellipsis, uncountable)Ellipsis of bullet vibrator.
  21. (rare)A young or little bull; a male calf.
    “—Chicago boasts of a citizen of fine discrimination and delicacy, who, riding in the suburbs with his best girl, passed a stable in the door of which stood a couple of calves. "See," said the young lady, "those two cute little cowlets." "Those are not cowlets, Araminta; they are bullets."”
    ““I am not sure a compilation of odds and ends should be called a ‘book.’ Perhaps ‘booklet’ would be the better designation. My daughter, when quite young, once spoke of a heifer calf she saw grazing on the rim of the road as a ‘cowlet.’ In reality, the wayside animal was a ‘bullet.’ Though this book, or booklet, isn’t even calf-bound, the analogy should have been close enough to make me wary of jumping to a conclusion. However, it is too late now.”
    “YES — imagine, if you can, that all human beings are cows and or bulls for just one day (I just can’t stand the thoughts of being a cow for more than one day). SO — lets^([sic]) take the cow and bull side of the question first. REMEMBER — you are a cow or bull. Mrs. Cow has been home all day busy getting the cotton seed meal and hulls ready for dinner, tending to the little cowlets and bullets and baking a bale of hay.”
    “> Correct. No other animals drink cow's milk but cows! / Cows drink milk? Maybe their little cowlets and bullets (future steerlets) do; but I have yet to see a cow drink milk. Other animals love cow milk. My dog, the barn cats up the road.”

verb

  1. (informal, transitive)To draw attention to (text) by, or as if by, placing a graphic bullet in front of it.
    “For instance, in the article on Tim Berners-Lee, we have bulleted "World Wide Web"”
    “The author has bulleted this section to make it easier to read and included important notes and warnings.”
    “I had mind-mapped everything from my business to my baby girl's needs and had bulleted my talking points, brownie points, and breaking points for just about every life area”
  2. (informal, intransitive)To speed, like a bullet.
    “Their debut started slow, but bulleted to number six in its fourth week.”
    “After a little pause, during which the train bulleted through the tunnel, he said, “Poor man,” referring to his late father.”
  3. (informal, transitive)To make a shot, especially with great speed.
    “He bulleted a header for his first score of the season.”
  4. (rare, slang, transitive)To inflict bullet shots upon.
    “They got bro-bro stuck on the wing, cah I picked up and bullet him”
  5. (slang, transitive)To fire from a job; to dismiss.
    “Mowbray never had that luxury, he was bulleted after a run of bad results just as Kenny Dalglish was at Liverpool last season.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English bullet (“an official tag or badge of registration or identification”), from Old French bullete, diminutive of boule (“ball”). Later influenced by Middle French boulette and French boulet.

Hooks

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