[būlta]
OriginBorrowed from Middle Low German bolte (“bolt”), or from Middle Dutch bult (“bolt”) (compare German Bolzen, English bolt), first mentioned in 17th-century dictionaries.
- declension-4, femininearrow (long, thin projectile to be shot with a bow or crossbow)
“bultas uzgalis” — arrowhead
“bultu maks” — quivver (lit. arrow container)
“izšaut bultu” — to shoot an arrow
- declension-4, femininearrow (symbol used to show a direction)
“bulta norāda uz pagrieziena virzienu” — the arrow indicates the direction of the turn
- declension-4, femininearrow, hand (pointer in a machine, clock, etc.)
“spidometra bulta” — speedometer arrow
“voltmetra bulta” — voltmeter arrow
- declension-4, femininebolt (component part of a lock which moves so as to lock or unlock it)
“atraut bultu” — to unlock the bolt
“aizšaut durvīm priekšā bultu” — to shoot the front door bolt
- declension-4, femininebolt (little metal rod with a head on one end and a threaded surface (like a screw) on the other end, used for fastening metal, wood, etc.)
“ratu bulta” — wheel bolt
“bultas galva” — bolt head
“būvkoku savienošana ar bultām” — fastening construction wood with bolts
Formsbulta(nominative, singular) · bultas(nominative, plural) · bultas(genitive, singular) · bultu(genitive, plural) · bultai(dative, singular) · bultām(dative, plural) · bultu(accusative, singular) · bultas(accusative, plural) · bultu(instrumental, singular) · bultām(instrumental, plural) · bultā(locative, singular) · bultās(locative, plural) · bulta(singular, vocative) · bultas(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0