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The phrase "bolt off" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to describe someone leaving quickly or suddenly, often in a hurry.
Example: "As soon as the meeting ended, she bolted off to catch her train."
Alternatives: "dash away" or "take off quickly."
Exact(13)
"Roger" the officer would say and then bolt off to some other location.
It is not uncommon for a super-recognizer, out on the town with friends, to bolt off after spotting someone with an outstanding warrant.
At one point, one of them picked up a red-hot train bolt off the fire, then started punching the other in the face with it.
Keep a level head and don't bolt off around the course while you walk it, slow and steady allows you to memorize it much better.
If your horse hasn't been ridden for a long time you might want to warm up on the lunge so he's paying attention to your aids but can't bolt off with you.
Broken and worn bits are obvious, and they bolt on and bolt off.
Similar(47)
Kyra, her German shepherd, bolted off with her.
He even bolted off the porch and bit a passer-by the other day.
Once he bolted off in the heavy dust of the 15th of 27 cobblestoned stretches, Cancellara was gone.
Our sheep heard me coming and bolted off in a burst of gray, away from the wire fence.
He admitted that he was disappointed when Cancellara, another classics champion, bolted off with a little more than a kilometer left and could not be countered.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com