Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Bombast
Bom′bast
(bŏm′bȧst or bŭm′bȧst; 277)
, Noun.
[OF.
bombace
cotton, LL. bombax
cotton, bombasium
a doublet of cotton; hence, padding, wadding, fustian. See Bombazine
.] 1.
Originally, cotton, or cotton wool.
[Obs.]
A candle with a wick of
bombast
. Lupton.
2.
Cotton, or any soft, fibrous material, used as stuffing for garments; stuffing; padding.
[Obs.]
How now, my sweet creature of
bombast
! Shakespeare
Doublets, stuffed with four, five, or six pounds of
bombast
at least. Stubbes.
3.
Fig.: High-sounding words; an inflated style; language above the dignity of the occasion; fustian.
Yet noisy
bombast
carefully avoid. Dryden.
Bom′bast
,Adj.
High-sounding; inflated; big without meaning; magniloquent; bombastic.
[He] evades them with a
Horribly stuffed with epithets of war.
bombast
circumstance,Horribly stuffed with epithets of war.
Shakespeare
Nor a tall metaphor in
bombast
way. Cowley.
Bom-bast′
(bŏm-bȧst′ or bŭm-bȧst′)
, Verb.
T.
To swell or fill out; to pad; to inflate.
[Obs.]
Not
bombasted
with words vain ticklish ears to feed. Drayton.
Webster 1828 Edition
Bombast
BOM'BAST
,Noun.
BOM'BAST
,Adj.
Definition 2024
bombast
bombast
English
Noun
bombast (countable and uncountable, plural bombasts)
- Originally, cotton, or cotton wool.
- Lupton
- a candle with a wick of bombast
- Lupton
- Cotton, or any soft, fibrous material, used as stuffing for garments; stuffing; padding.
- Shakespeare
- How now, my sweet creature of bombast!
- Stubbes
- doublets, stuffed with four, five, or six pounds of bombast at least
- Shakespeare
- (figuratively) High-sounding words; a pompous or ostentatious manner of writing or speaking; language above the dignity of the occasion.
- Dryden
- Yet noisy bombast carefully avoid.
- 1898, William Graham Sumner, “The Conquest of the United States by Spain”, in War and Other Essays, Yale, published 1911, page 331:
- Upon a little serious examination the off-hand disposal of an important question of policy by the declaration that Americans can do anything proves to be only a silly piece of bombast.
- Dryden
Synonyms
- (cotton or cotton wool): fustian
- (high-sounding words): bombard phrase (obs.), fustian, grandiloquence
Verb
bombast (third-person singular simple present bombasts, present participle bombasting, simple past and past participle bombasted)
- To swell or fill out; to pad; to inflate.
- 1839, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Coleridge's Literary Remains, Volume 4.:
- Ib. Their doctrine is to be seen in Jacob Behmen's books by him that hath nothing else to do, than to bestow a great deal of time to understand him that was not willing to be easily understood, and to know that his bombasted words do signify nothing more than before was easily known by common familiar terms.
- 2013, Christianna Brand, What Dread Hand?: A Collection of Short Stories
- The ugly truth is, Gerald,' she said viciously, 'that you're a phoney, a rotten, bombasting phoney, trying to cover up from all the world, […]
-
Adjective
bombast (comparative more bombast, superlative most bombast)
- High-sounding; inflated; big without meaning; magniloquent; bombastic.
- Shakespeare
- [He] evades them with a bombast circumstance, / Horribly stuffed with epithets of war.
- Cowley
- Nor a tall metaphor in bombast way.
- Shakespeare