bombard / verb bɒmˈbɑrd, bəm-; noun ˈbɒm bɑrd /

⚽高中词汇轰炸轰击炮轰轰击声

bombard2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to attack or batter with artillery fire.
  2. to attack with bombs.
  3. to assail vigorously: to bombard the speaker with questions.
  4. Physics. to direct high energy particles or radiations against: to bombard a nucleus.
n. 名词 noun
  1. the earliest kind of cannon, originally throwing stone balls.
  2. Nautical. bomb ketch.
  3. an English leather tankard of the 18th century and earlier, similar to but larger than a blackjack.
  4. Obsolete. a leather jug.

bombard 近义词

v. 动词 verb

assault, attack

更多bombard例句

  1. Lee says men bombard him on Twitter with questions about how to get into the industry.
  2. Just Google “Patrick Wilson Girls backlash,” and wait for the hateful, Lena Dunham-bashing vitriol to bombard your screen.
  3. Your most grating acquaintance could – and usually would – bombard you with reams of unoriginal drivel at the press of a key.
  4. Listen, suppose they got in, suppose they start to bombard Guantanamo?
  5. In other words, it's business as usual as the two sides bombard each other militarily and diplomatically.
  6. The Germans continued to bombard Ypres with large calibre shells, heaping ruins upon ruins.
  7. Three days before Filangieri landed, the gunners in the citadel began to bombard the helpless town lying beneath them.
  8. Sheriff Jones demanded the arms of the people, otherwise he would bombard the town.
  9. Wolfe's first move was to occupy Point Levi, and erect batteries there, from which he could bombard the city.
  10. The 15th was fixed upon for the grand assault, and the entire fleet had orders to move up and bombard at an early hour.