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The phrase "bombard you" is correct and usable in written English.
It means to attack or overwhelm someone with a large amount of information, questions, or requests. Example 1: "During the job interview, the panel of interviewers bombarded her with difficult questions." Example 2: "The new teacher was bombarded with emails from parents asking for updates on their child's progress." Example 3: "The company's marketing team bombarded customers with promotional emails and social media ads."
Exact(56)
Everywhere you look, media reports bombard you with stories about how Jennifer Hudson lost 80 pounds by joining Weight Watchers, Sharon Osbourne shed 23 pounds on the Atkins diet, and other A-listers slimmed down on the Zone Diet.
"They bombard you with courses," he said.
They bombard you with alarming statistics about unsustainable entitlements.
I am now going to bombard you with figures.
But we promise not to bombard you with guesswork or unintelligible legal technicalities.
We promise not to bombard you with guesswork or unintelligible legal technicalities.
"Your hotel staff has been ordered to bombard you with mahalos.
Similar(4)
The phone bombards you with warnings and disclaimers — sometimes upside-down.
Facebook can be at its most irritating when bombarding you with notifications.
Because Dine doesn't just provide simple pleasures – it bombards you with them.
He knows exactly when to approach you and say, 'Watch this sound, watch this word.' He never bombards you".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com