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      • "explosive projectile," originally consisting of a hollow ball or shell filled with explosive material, 1580s, from French bombe, from Italian bomba, probably from Latin bombus "a deep, hollow noise; a buzzing or booming sound," from Greek bombos "deep and hollow sound," echoic.
      www.etymonline.com/word/bomb
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  2. Originally of mortar shells, etc.; modern sense of "explosive device placed by hand or dropped from airplane" is from 1909. The meaning "old car" is from 1953. The meaning "success" is from 1954 (late 1990s slang the bomb "the best" probably is a fresh formation); opposite sense of "a failure" is from 1961. The bomb "the

    • Deutsch (German)

      The bomb "die Atombombe" stammt aus dem Jahr 1945....

    • Français (French)

      The bomb "la bombe atomique" date de 1945. Comparez avec...

    • Bomb 뜻

      bomb 뜻: 폭탄; "폭발성 탄환," 원래는 폭발물로 채워진 빈 공 또는 껍질로 이루어진 것으로,...

    • Bomb-Proof

      The bomb "the atomic bomb" is from 1945. ... (1903 as push),...

    • Bombastic

      Middle English -ik, -ick, word-forming element making...

    • Bombardment

      "continuous attack with shot and shell," 1702, from bombard...

  3. OED's earliest evidence for bomb is from 1694, in Philosophical Transactions 1693. It is also recorded as a noun from the late 1500s. bomb is formed within English, by conversion.

  4. Jan 21, 2016 · According to Jack Kelly, historian and author of Gunpowder: Alchemy, Bombards & Pyrotechnics, those bombs were specifically mortar bombs that used gunpowder, now referred to as black powder, as...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BombBomb - Wikipedia

    The word comes from the Latin bombus, which in turn comes from the Greek βόμβος romanized bombos, [3] an onomatopoetic term meaning 'booming', 'buzzing'. A "wind-and-dust" bomb depicted in the Ming Dynasty book Huolongjing. The pot contains a tube of gunpowder, and was thrown at invaders. [4]

  6. Sep 12, 2003 · The word "bomb" comes to us from the French, who derived it from the Latin. But the Romans got it originally from the Greek bombos, meaning a deep, hollow sound. "Bombard" is a derivation. Today bomb is pronounced "balm," but in the early days it was commonly pronounced "bum."

  7. Oct 13, 2024 · An explosive device used or intended as a weapon, (especially) one dropped from an aircraft. 2008, Sidney Gelb, Foreign Service Agent, page 629: The size of the ground hole crater from the blast indicates it was a bomb. (dated, often with the) The atomic bomb.

  8. English word bomb comes from Ancient Greek (to 1453) βόμβος, Ancient Greek (to 1453) όμβος, Dutch bombe, and later Latin bombus (A buzz or humming sound.)

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