bomb

/bɒm/ (bre, ipa) · /bɑːm/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈbäm/ (ame, mw)

bomb — noun

1. an explosive weapon that is dropped, thrown, or hidden so it blows up and causes

1.名詞B1
釋義

an explosive weapon that is dropped, thrown, or hidden so it blows up and causes death, injury, or major damage.

例句

Airport staff found a small bomb under the empty delivery van.

bomb under + vehicle

The museum closed after police reported a bomb near the front gate.

bomb near + public place

同義詞
  • explosive device

    broader and more technical; not always a military weapon

  • explosive

    very broad; can mean the substance rather than the weapon

  • warhead

    the explosive part attached to a missile or similar weapon

文法句型

a bomb explodes

plant a bomb

bomb under/in + place

用法筆記

Often used in news with words like threat, scare, blast, and disposal. Unlike senses 2-6, this is the literal explosive object.

常見錯誤

The soldiers bombed a bomb near the bridge.
The soldiers planted a bomb near the bridge.
💡use the noun for the object and the verb for the attack.

2. something, especially a film, show, plan, or product, that fails very badly and

2.名詞
釋義

something, especially a film, show, plan, or product, that fails very badly and disappoints people.

例句

The new comedy was a bomb, and half the seats stayed empty.

be a bomb = fail badly

Investors said the product launch was a bomb after weak sales.

同義詞
  • flop

    very close in meaning; especially common for films and shows

  • dud

    informal; stresses disappointment more than public failure

  • disaster

    stronger and broader; can describe any very bad result

反義詞
  • hit

    something popular and successful

  • success

    neutral opposite for a thing that works well

文法句型

be a bomb

用法筆記

Usually follows be and often describes films, plays, products, or events. Distinguish from sense 3, which is about money rather than failure.

常見錯誤

The movie was very bomb.
The movie was a bomb.
💡this sense is a noun phrase after 'be', not an adjective.

3. a very large amount of money, especially more than people expect to pay or spend

3.名詞
釋義

a very large amount of money, especially more than people expect to pay or spend.

例句

The repairs cost a bomb after the storm damaged the roof.

cost a bomb

Tickets for the final match were a bomb, so we stayed home.

同義詞
  • fortune

    common way to say something is very expensive

  • small fortune

    slightly humorous phrase for a surprisingly high price

  • pile

    informal; focuses on a large sum, not always on cost

文法句型

cost a bomb

spend a bomb

pay a bomb

用法筆記

Most common after cost, spend, or pay. Common in British informal English. Distinguish from sense 2, where a bomb is an unsuccessful thing.

常見錯誤

The laptop was bomb.
The laptop cost a bomb.
💡this money sense usually appears after 'cost', 'spend', or 'pay'.

4. a kick sent almost straight up so players can run under it and try to catch it w

4.名詞
釋義

a kick sent almost straight up so players can run under it and try to catch it when it drops.

例句

Noa kicked a bomb, and the wings chased the dropping ball.

rugby: kick a bomb

From midfield, Tariq sent up a bomb for his teammates.

同義詞

文法句型

kick a bomb

drop a bomb

用法筆記

Used mainly in rugby and similar games. The ball goes high into the air rather than being passed flat across the field.

常見錯誤

Tariq threw a bomb for the chase.
Tariq kicked a bomb for the chase.
💡in this sense, the ball is kicked high, not thrown.

5. a hit in baseball that allows the batter to go around all the bases and score.

5.名詞
釋義

a hit in baseball that allows the batter to go around all the bases and score.

例句

Diego hit a bomb over the left-field wall in the eighth.

baseball: hit a bomb

The crowd rose when Hana smashed a bomb over center field.

同義詞

文法句型

hit a bomb

用法筆記

Mainly heard in baseball commentary and fan talk. It is more informal and more vivid than the standard term home run.

常見錯誤

Diego scored a bomb in the eighth.
Diego hit a bomb in the eighth.
💡this baseball sense is treated like a hit.

6. a very long forward pass thrown high and deep down the field in American footbal

6.名詞
釋義

a very long forward pass thrown high and deep down the field in American football.

例句

The quarterback's bomb landed just beyond the defender's hands.

American football: throw a bomb

Late in the game, Omar threw a bomb to the corner.

同義詞

文法句型

throw a bomb

用法筆記

Used in American football talk for a pass thrown deep downfield. It refers to a throw, not to a kick.

常見錯誤

The coach kicked a bomb to the end zone.
The quarterback threw a bomb to the end zone.
💡this sense is a pass, not a kick.

bomb — verb