Verb
They catapulted rocks toward the castle.
The publicity catapulted her CD to the top of the charts.
The novel catapulted him from unknown to best-selling author.
He catapulted to fame after his first book was published.
Her career was catapulting ahead.
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Noun
Redesigns, better engines, and improved stealth and aerodynamics culminated in its first catapult launch test in 2021.—Christopher McFadden, Interesting Engineering, 25 Apr. 2026 But Bill Gates, the Microsoft founder, catapults to second on the True Net Worth list once charitable giving is factored in.—Daniel De Visé, USA Today, 23 Apr. 2026
Verb
DeSantis also championed the medical freedom proposal, which would have cemented the policies that catapulted him to GOP stardom during the COVID-19 pandemic.—Garrett Shanley, Miami Herald, 28 Apr. 2026 Grainge was catapulted into an entirely new level of influence.—Elizabeth Gulino, Allure, 28 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for catapult
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle French or Latin; Middle French catapulte, from Latin catapulta, from Greek katapaltēs, from kata- + pallein to hurl