| 释义 | 
		Definition of bombardment in English: bombardmentnoun bɒmˈbɑːdm(ə)ntbɑmˈbɑrdmənt 1A continuous attack with bombs, shells, or other missiles.  an aerial bombardment will precede the attack Example sentencesExamples -  The countryside of Pisa had been ravaged by aerial bombardments and artillery barrages, leaving only a wilderness of roofless houses and smoking craters.
 -  On the other front, Germans frequently mistook Soviet mortar barrages for aerial bombardments.
 -  The men suffered continuous shell and mortar bombardment followed by ferocious counter-attacks.
 -  The men kill time collecting the small parachutes from the shells in between attacks and bombardments.
 -  It was the day after a lot of attacks and bombardments and deaths had taken place.
 
 Synonyms shelling, strafing, pounding, pelting, blitz, air raid, strafe, bombing barrage, strike, attack, assault, onslaught archaic cannonade, fusillade - 1.1 A continuous flow of questions, criticisms, or information.
 a steady bombardment of emails and phone calls Example sentencesExamples -  I strongly feel that your campaign stirs up unnecessary resentment towards a service that has received a constant bombardment of criticism.
 -  Companies can use the service too, but will that mean a bombardment of spam?
 -  Less than a month to the elections, and ahead lies a bombardment of mind-numbing party political messages to rival the deadly effusions of a Death Star.
 -  The show's overstuffed visual style seems perfectly suited to today's MTV-era of image bombardment.
 -  Stark warnings and a constant bombardment of information on the fragile nature of Earth's environment surround us on a weekly basis.
 -  But one thing we know is the brain craves simplicity especially in the face of today's media bombardment.
 -  Even grief, with all its emotional gravity, is nevertheless subject to being lost in the bombardment of consecutive experiences.
 -  Local stories, accents, and images are drowned out by a multi-channel bombardment of glossy programming, bearing little resemblance to the Caribbean experience.
 -  Today's report says the bombardment of children with messages of what is cool pits children against each other and their parents.
 -  Some see restaurants as a last refuge, the only place left to escape bombardment by warnings about what not to eat.
 -  But then slowly, inexorably, the great occasion descended into torpor - deliberately induced by a classic Brownite bombardment of figures, forecasts and the odd indisputable fact.
 -  Web users are getting fed up with the bombardment of irrelevant messages every time they log on.
 -  This process involves a sort of sensory bombardment.
 -  So if massive ad bombardments no longer are the way to build brands, what do these authors recommend?
 -  No one escaped his bombardment of phone calls, faxes and e-mails.
 -  The mood in the American population was markedly subdued as well, outside of the pockets of pro-war zealots and despite (or perhaps because of) the media bombardment.
 -  But consumer tolerance of marketing bombardment is wearing thin.
 
  
    Definition of bombardment in US English: bombardmentnounbämˈbärdməntbɑmˈbɑrdmənt 1A continuous attack with bombs, shells, or other missiles.  an aerial bombardment will precede the attack Example sentencesExamples -  The men suffered continuous shell and mortar bombardment followed by ferocious counter-attacks.
 -  It was the day after a lot of attacks and bombardments and deaths had taken place.
 -  On the other front, Germans frequently mistook Soviet mortar barrages for aerial bombardments.
 -  The countryside of Pisa had been ravaged by aerial bombardments and artillery barrages, leaving only a wilderness of roofless houses and smoking craters.
 -  The men kill time collecting the small parachutes from the shells in between attacks and bombardments.
 
 Synonyms shelling, strafing, pounding, pelting, blitz, air raid, strafe, bombing - 1.1 A continuous flow of questions, criticisms, or information.
 a steady bombardment of emails and phone calls Example sentencesExamples -  Web users are getting fed up with the bombardment of irrelevant messages every time they log on.
 -  The show's overstuffed visual style seems perfectly suited to today's MTV-era of image bombardment.
 -  Local stories, accents, and images are drowned out by a multi-channel bombardment of glossy programming, bearing little resemblance to the Caribbean experience.
 -  Stark warnings and a constant bombardment of information on the fragile nature of Earth's environment surround us on a weekly basis.
 -  Less than a month to the elections, and ahead lies a bombardment of mind-numbing party political messages to rival the deadly effusions of a Death Star.
 -  So if massive ad bombardments no longer are the way to build brands, what do these authors recommend?
 -  This process involves a sort of sensory bombardment.
 -  But consumer tolerance of marketing bombardment is wearing thin.
 -  But one thing we know is the brain craves simplicity especially in the face of today's media bombardment.
 -  The mood in the American population was markedly subdued as well, outside of the pockets of pro-war zealots and despite (or perhaps because of) the media bombardment.
 -  Some see restaurants as a last refuge, the only place left to escape bombardment by warnings about what not to eat.
 -  But then slowly, inexorably, the great occasion descended into torpor - deliberately induced by a classic Brownite bombardment of figures, forecasts and the odd indisputable fact.
 -  I strongly feel that your campaign stirs up unnecessary resentment towards a service that has received a constant bombardment of criticism.
 -  Today's report says the bombardment of children with messages of what is cool pits children against each other and their parents.
 -  No one escaped his bombardment of phone calls, faxes and e-mails.
 -  Companies can use the service too, but will that mean a bombardment of spam?
 -  Even grief, with all its emotional gravity, is nevertheless subject to being lost in the bombardment of consecutive experiences.
 
  
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