Associations to the word «Bombard»
Noun
- Navy
- Kabul
- Rocket
- Diffraction
- Raid
- Rutherford
- Crossbow
- Powder
- Position
- Pensacola
- Anchorage
- Outpost
- Darmstadt
- Vessel
- Enrico
- Flank
- Constantinople
- Submission
- Sunk
- Mcmillan
- Pedestal
- Sinking
- Midway
- Brig
- Retreated
- Havre
- Decay
- Monitor
- Reconnaissance
- Patrol
- Invasion
- Force
- Belgrade
- Coast
- Bolshevik
- Dane
- Attack
- Belgian
- Dug
- Torpedo
- Gulf
- Lighter
- Boer
- Ottomans
- Explosive
- Offensive
- Eugen
- Bomber
- Airman
- Saturation
- Hoop
- Phosphorus
- Strait
- Uss
- Militant
- Carrier
- Cochrane
- Carbon
- Ev
- Hydrogen
- Dump
- Gaza
- Volley
- Pont
- Tunis
- Admiralty
Adjective
Adverb
Pictures for the word «Bombard»
Wiktionary
BOMBARD, noun. A medieval primitive cannon, used chiefly in sieges for throwing heavy stone balls.
BOMBARD, noun. (obsolete) a bassoon-like medieval instrument
BOMBARD, noun. (obsolete) a large liquor container made of leather, in the form of a jug or a bottle.
BOMBARD, noun. (poetic) (rare) A bombardment.
BOMBARD, noun. (music) A bombardon.
BOMBARD, verb. To attack something with bombs, artillery shells or other missiles or projectiles.
BOMBARD, verb. (figuratively) To attack something or someone by directing objects at them.
BOMBARD, verb. (physics) To direct at a substance an intense stream of high-energy particles, usually sub-atomic or made of at most a few atoms.
BOMBARD PHRASE, noun. (obsolete) Inflated language; bombast.
Dictionary definition
BOMBARD, noun. A large shawm; the bass member of the shawm family.
BOMBARD, verb. Cast, hurl, or throw repeatedly with some missile; "They pelted each other with snowballs".
BOMBARD, verb. Throw bombs at or attack with bombs; "The Americans bombed Dresden".
BOMBARD, verb. Address with continuously or persistently, as if with a barrage; "The speaker was barraged by an angry audience"; "The governor was bombarded with requests to grant a pardon to the convicted killer".
BOMBARD, verb. Direct high energy particles or radiation against.
Wise words
All our words from loose using have lost their edge.