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Boulder Definition

Contents

English

Etymology

From Middle English bulder, possibly from Swedish bullersten (“noisy stone”)

Pronunciation

Noun

boulder (plural boulders)

  1. A large piece of stone that can theoretically be moved if enough force is applied.

Derived terms

Verb

to boulder (third-person singular simple present boulders, present participle bouldering, simple past and past participle bouldered)

  1. To engage in bouldering
    • 2005 November 18, “The ties that bind ..., ... and prevent falls have become family unifier in rock climbing”, Salt Lake Tribune:
      He bouldered a route in the same area with ease. Mitchell, 11, was hanging with the older kids in an area where bouldering nearly upside down seemed to be....
    • 2006 July 18, Tony Durrant, “The steep learning curve”, telegraph.co.uk:
      As the week unfolded, we were taught about the equipment we needed, how to tie a rope and what to wear. We learnt to balance on our feet rather than cling on with our arms and to trust our rock shoes, the moulded rubber slippers that can grip the smoothest of surfaces. We abseiled, bouldered and belayed.
    • 2007 February 15, “Homes blend eco-friendliness, unique design”, Sierra Sun:
      Built around a massive egg-shaped granite boulder, the home of Darrow and ... “ There's even old climbing hardware in it because people bouldered on it for years.

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