英:[ˈbɒmɪŋ]
美:[ˈbɑmɪŋ]
英:[ˈbɒmɪŋ]
美:[ˈbɑmɪŋ]
n.
轰炸,投弹
v.
轰炸,投弹于( bomb的现在分词 )
失败,不及格
快速前进
bomb·ing
bam ihng
复数:bombings
词根:bomb
n.bomb 炸弹
bombardment 轰炸;炮击
bomber 轰炸机;投弹手
bombshell 炸弹;突发事件;引起震惊的人或事
bombardier 投弹手;炮兵下士
bomblet 小炸弹
bombsight 投弹瞄准器
vi.bomb 轰炸,投弹;失败
vt.bomb 轰炸,投弹于
noun
an explosive device fused to detonate under specified conditions
atomic bombalso: nuclear weapons in general —usually used with the
a vessel for compressed gases: such as
a pressure vessel for conducting chemical experiments
a container for an aerosol (such as an insecticide) : spray can
a rounded mass of lava exploded from a volcano
a lead-lined container for radioactive material
failure, flop
the play was a bomb
British a large sum of money
British a great success : hit
slang one that is striking or extraordinary—used with the
their new album is the bomb
a long pass in football
a very long shot (as in basketball)also: home run
shooting 3-point bombs
something unexpected and unpleasant—often used with drop
dropped a bomb with her resignation
verb
transitive verb
to attack with or as if with bombs : bombard a bombed village
The planes successfully bombed their target.
to defeat decisively
baseball to score many runs against (a pitcher)
Allen tried a new slider pitch without success and was bombed in Cincinnati.—Jack Lang
to hit (a ball, puck, or shot) very hard bomb a long drive down the fairway
bomb a home run
slang to fail (a test)
I bombed my history exam.
intransitive verb
informal to fall flat : to fail completely a joke that bombed
The movie bombed at the box office.
informal to move rapidly
a car bombing down the hill
suicide bombing自杀性爆炸
car bombing车载炸弹爆炸
precision bombingn. 精确轰炸;定点轰炸(等于pin-point bombing)
“用炸弹袭击”,1610年代, bomb(v.)的动名词。
大强度锻炼
Noun borrowed from Spanish or Italian bomba or French bombe, all probably in part from an onomatopoeic base bomb- (as in Greek bómbos "booming, humming," Old Norse bumba "drum," Lithuanian bambėti "to mutter, mumble," Albanian bumbullin "it is thundering"), in part back-formation from Medieval Latin bombardus or Middle French bombarde bombard >entry 1 Note: The origin and transmission of bomba, bombe, etc., in the sense "explosive device, projectile, etc.," among European languages is not certain. Bomba is attested earliest in Spanish, appearing several times in the second half of the 16th century (canto 18 of La Araucana of Alonso de Ercilla y Zúñiga, the Descripción general de África of Luis del Mármol, the Historia de las cosas … del Gran Reyno de la China of Juan González de Mendoza). Mendoza's book (1585) is the source of an early and aberrant instance of bomb in English: his bombas de fuego is rendered as "bomes of fire" in Robert Parke's translation (The Historie of the Great and Mightie Kingdome of China, London, 1588, p. 65). Bomba is recorded as Italian in Antoine Oudin's Italian-French dictionary (Recherches italiennes et françoises, Paris, 1640), where it is glossed "bombe, ou balon de feu" ("bomb, or ball of fire"), though it is not recorded in an Italian text until 1686 (Paolo Segneri, Il cristiano instruito, Florence, p. 327); Oudin's gloss also apparently constitutes the first record in French. Significantly earlier than any of these is Latin bombus, which occurs twice in the Commentarii, an account of the exploits of the condottiere Jacopo Piccinino in 1452-53 by the Neapolitan humanist Giannantonio de' Pandone, "il Porcellio" (ca. 1405-85); Pandone's bombus appears to be some sort of exploding projectile ("Hic Tibertus Dux bombi fulmine in ulna sauciatur" - "Here Tibertus [the condottiere Tiberto Brandolini] was wounded in the forearm by the flash of a bombus"); the 18th-century lexicographer Du Cange, in Glossarium mediae et infimae Latinitatis, glosses bombus in this passage, alluding to French bombe, as pila incendiaria, "fireball." Spanish bomba in the sense "pump," attested from the early 16th century, is probably an independent formation; cf. pump >entry 1. Verb derivative of bomb >entry 1
The first known use of bomb was in 1662
bondholdernoun
the owner of a government or corporation bond
bond1 of 2noun
something that binds
a material or device for binding
a means by which atoms, ions, or groups of atoms are held together in a molecule or crystal
a uniting or binding force or influence : tie
the bonds of friendship
a pledge to do an act or pay a sum on or before a set date or forfeit a sum if the pledge is not fulfilled
a certificate promising payment of a certain sum on or before a stated day and issued by a government or corporation as an evidence of debt
a binding or connection made by overlapping parts of a structure (as in laying brick)
bond2 of 2verb
to protect or secure by or operate under a bond
to hold together or make solid by or as if by a bond
to form a close relationship especially through frequent togetherness
the new mother bonded with her child
bondagenoun
the state of being an enslaved person or serf
bonbonnoun
a candy with a soft coating (as chocolate) and a creamy center
bonanzanoun
a large and rich mineral deposit
something that brings a rich return
bombshellnoun
bomb entry 1 sense 1a
a great surprise
bomb1 of 2noun
an explosive device that has a fuse and is designed to go off under any of various conditions
atomic bombalso: nuclear weapons in general —usually used with the
a container in which a substance (as an insecticide) is stored under pressure and from which it is released in a fine spray
flop entry 2 sense 2
bomb2 of 2verb
to attack with bombs
informal to fail completely
the movie bombed
bombproofadjective
safe against the explosive force of bombs
bomb1 of 2noun
an explosive device that has a fuse and is designed to go off under any of various conditions
atomic bombalso: nuclear weapons in general —usually used with the
a container in which a substance (as an insecticide) is stored under pressure and from which it is released in a fine spray
flop entry 2 sense 2
bomb2 of 2verb
to attack with bombs
informal to fail completely
the movie bombed
1 By then, the city glowed, ablaze from Allied bombing.
2 Strange as it sounds, we got used to the bombing and shelling.
3 The morning of the bombing my friends and I had looked forward to a Sunday afternoon Cavalettes club meeting.
4 But the atomic bombing, if anything, just sharpened our worry.
5 She gave it to me only a few weeks before the bombings, I thanked her, she said, “Why are you thanking me? It’s a gift for me.”
6 They held out bravely against repeated enemy bombing.
敌人轮番轰炸,他们仍英勇地抵抗.
7 He chose not to explain to the American people that the bombing would continue indefinitely.
8 “We can drench them from the air,” I said, including myself in the bombing raid.
9 The bombings began at dawn and have continued unabated.
10 It was past midnight when a frantic telephone call came in from the site where the practice bombing was supposed to take place.
11 Whatever excitement and girlish joy I felt before the bombing simply died for a long period after the bombing.
12 “It was not my fault about the bombing.”
13 Through her connections in the Soviet government, she managed to get Stalin to approve her position as the commander of a new long-distance bombing regiment.
14 She decided that the 46th Guards should change the way they flew their bombing missions.
15 The bombing and marines were not having any noticeable effect on enemy momentum.
16 He ordered a brutal bombardment of North Vietnam, soon known as the Christmas bombing.
17 The bombing has been far more widespread than the military will admit.
轰炸的范围远远大于军方愿意承认的范围。
18 “Colored folks are starting to move into the white neighborhoods there, and well, there’ve been a lot of bombings. In one part of town there have been so many explosions, they call it Dynamite Hill.”
19 The bombing was the latest in a spate of terrorist attacks.
这次的爆炸事件是近期一连串恐怖主义袭击中最新的一起。
20 All of them were sure I had been singed to nothing from what they’d heard on the radio about the bombing.
3 轰击
4 炸弹袭击