bombard 的 2 个定义
- to attack or batter with artillery fire.
- to attack with bombs.
- to assail vigorously: to bombard the speaker with questions.
- Physics. to direct high energy particles or radiations against: to bombard a nucleus.
- the earliest kind of cannon, originally throwing stone balls.
- Nautical. bomb ketch.
- an English leather tankard of the 18th century and earlier, similar to but larger than a blackjack.
- Obsolete. a leather jug.
bombard 近义词
assault, attack
更多bombard例句
- Lee says men bombard him on Twitter with questions about how to get into the industry.
- Just Google “Patrick Wilson Girls backlash,” and wait for the hateful, Lena Dunham-bashing vitriol to bombard your screen.
- Your most grating acquaintance could – and usually would – bombard you with reams of unoriginal drivel at the press of a key.
- Listen, suppose they got in, suppose they start to bombard Guantanamo?
- In other words, it's business as usual as the two sides bombard each other militarily and diplomatically.
- The Germans continued to bombard Ypres with large calibre shells, heaping ruins upon ruins.
- Three days before Filangieri landed, the gunners in the citadel began to bombard the helpless town lying beneath them.
- Sheriff Jones demanded the arms of the people, otherwise he would bombard the town.
- Wolfe's first move was to occupy Point Levi, and erect batteries there, from which he could bombard the city.
- The 15th was fixed upon for the grand assault, and the entire fleet had orders to move up and bombard at an early hour.