bombard

बौछार करना
definition
verb
the city was bombarded by federal forces
attack (a place or person) continuously with bombs, shells, or other missiles.
noun
Yet for all the muskets, bombards , and cannon, Kelly appears more interested in the impact of gunpowder as a technological force driving deeper societal changes.
a cannon of the earliest type, which originally fired a stone ball.
translation of 'bombard'
गोला दागना
verb
बौछार करना,
बमबारी करना,
तोपों से उड़ाना,
गोला चलाना,
गोलाबारी करना
example
The worm has programmed infected computers to 'bombard' the web site with corrupt data from this Saturday with the intention of forcing it to crash.
The Hague Convention, Article Four, states that you are not allowed to 'bombard' uninhabited villages or villages that are not occupied by defendants.
One answer of course might be for the Allies to 'bombard' the railway tracks leading to the death camps.
But the last thing I wanted to do was 'bombard' her with millions of questions.
They could 'bombard' the city from the outskirts but could not occupy it without unacceptable losses.
Phipps moved four ships in close to shore to 'bombard' the town, but caused little damage.
But what about the TV commercials that incessantly 'bombard' living rooms across America?
For a second night, the Marines called in a gunship to 'bombard' insurgent positions.
Protesters fear the green light will be given to the proposal but have promised they will continue to 'bombard' environment and health bosses with their concerns.
Government forces used mortars, helicopter gunships and airplanes to 'bombard' rebel positions.
The last thing I want to do is 'bombard' people with information too early.
Rosin feels that it's best to address the messages that 'bombard' her students.
As children we are 'bombarded' with the question, ‘What do you want to be when you grow up?’
Tom was 'bombarded' with questions and he was getting fed up.
On the other front, Germans frequently mistook Soviet mortar barrages for aerial 'bombardments' .
Early siege cannon, or 'bombards' , were heavy and rested in a static mount.
By 1910 Ernest Rutherford and his collaborators at Manchester had interrogated an atom by 'bombarding' it with heavier particles.
A young scientist named Henry Moseley experimented with 'bombarding' atoms of different elements with x rays.
The experimenters 'bombarded' a thin gold foil with alpha particles (helium atoms without electrons).
It was the day after a lot of attacks and 'bombardments' and deaths had taken place.
Helicopters and tanks 'bombarded' the same towns around the city on Wednesday evening after similar gunfights led to the death of three soldiers.
We are 'bombarded' with information and the constant pressure of trying to keep up.
These men experimented by 'bombarding' uranium with neutrons.
On 12 May 1982, FAS Skyhawks attacked the HMS Glasgow and HMS Brilliant while they were 'bombarding' Port Stanley.
I wouldn't have been able to look away if terrorists were 'bombarding' the room and announcing the end of the world, I was that enraptured.
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' .
We are 'bombarded' with information every waking moment!
Tanks rolled into the main square overnight after coalition warplanes 'bombarded' the city.
From my area we could see aeroplanes 'bombarding' the centre of Santiago.
Credits: Google Translate