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Definition of bombard verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

bombard

verb
 
/bɒmˈbɑːd/
 
/bɑːmˈbɑːrd/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they bombard
 
/bɒmˈbɑːd/
 
/bɑːmˈbɑːrd/
he / she / it bombards
 
/bɒmˈbɑːdz/
 
/bɑːmˈbɑːrdz/
past simple bombarded
 
/bɒmˈbɑːdɪd/
 
/bɑːmˈbɑːrdɪd/
past participle bombarded
 
/bɒmˈbɑːdɪd/
 
/bɑːmˈbɑːrdɪd/
-ing form bombarding
 
/bɒmˈbɑːdɪŋ/
 
/bɑːmˈbɑːrdɪŋ/
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  1. bombard somebody/something (with something) to attack a place by firing large guns at it or dropping bombs on it continuously
    • The capital was heavily bombarded for several months.
    Topics War and conflictc1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • heavily
    See full entry
  2. bombard somebody/something (with something) to attack somebody with a lot of questions, criticisms, etc. or by giving them too much information
    • We have been bombarded with letters of complaint.
    • We are bombarded daily with propaganda about what we should eat.
    Extra Examples
    • We're all constantly bombarded with television ads.
    • The interviewer bombarded her with intimate questions.
    • The local newspaper has been bombarded with letters from angry residents.
    • The media bombard us continually with images of how we should look.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • constantly
    • continually
    preposition
    • with
    See full entry
  3. Word Originlate Middle English (as a noun denoting an early form of cannon, also a shawm) from Old French bombarde, probably based on Latin bombus ‘booming, humming’, from Greek bombos, of imitative origin. The verb (late 16th cent.) is from French bombarder.
See bombard in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
trait
noun
 
 
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