Sentences with Bomb, Sentences about Bomb

1. It struck like a bombshell!
2. The ship set sail for Bombay.
3. The bomb exploded two days ago.
4. Science produced the atomic bomb.
5. I’m touched, Rixon. A bomb. How elaborate.
6. My father was there when the bomb exploded.
7. The bomb blew My mother’s car to smithereens.
8. Steve completed many dangerous bombing raids.
9. The more bombers, the less room for doves of peace.
10. Steve was three meters away when the bomb exploded.
11. No sooner had he struck the match than the bomb exploded.
12. We can bomb the world to pieces, but we can’t bomb it into peace.
13. Markets rebounded quickly from morning jitters after the London Thursday terrorist bombing.
14. The question is the morning after. What sort of Iraq do we wake up to after the bombing? What happens in the region? What impact could it have? These are questions leaders I have spoken to have posed.
15. Even in India the Hindi film industry might be the best known but there are movies made in other regional languages in India, be it Tamil or Bengali. Those experiences too are different from the ones in Bombay.
16. Most of the top actors and actresses may be working in ten or twelve films at the same time, so they will give one director two hours and maybe shoot in Bombay in the morning and Madras in the evening. It happens.
17. We had news this morning of another successful atomic bomb being dropped on Nagasaki. These two heavy blows have fallen in quick succession upon the Japanese and there will be quite a little space before we intend to drop another.
18. When I wrote the song, I had the sea near Bombay in mind. We stayed at a hotel by the sea, and the fishermen come up at five in the morning and they were all chanting. And we went on the beach and we got chased by a mad dog – big as a donkey.
19. I think it has other roots, has to do, in part, with a general anxiety in contemporary life… nuclear bombs, inequality of possibility and chance, inequality of goods allotted to us, a kind of general racist, unjust attitude that is pervasive.
20. The compulsion to do good is an innate American trait. Only North Americans seem to believe that they always should, may, and actually can choose somebody with whom to share their blessings. Ultimately this attitude leads to bombing people into the acceptance of gifts.


