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ka-boom

American  
[kuh-boom] / kəˈbum /

interjection

  1. (used to represent a sudden and loud sound, as of an explosion or a bass drum.)


Etymology

Origin of ka-boom

ka-, boom 1

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Ian Eagle, the ace Nets broadcaster working playoff games for TNT, had seen enough by Game 5 of the Clippers’ series against Utah to excitedly trumpet a corner 3-pointer from Jackson thusly: “Ka-boom! Reggie Jackson has been Mr. June.”

From New York Times

The spring plankton bloom went off just a few weeks ago, in a ka-boom of nutrition.

From Seattle Times

“All of a sudden you heard ka-boom, ka-boom, and one of the lines snapped,” recalls Snell, who ran outside to find a tree had done the damage a short distance down the road where he lives.

From Seattle Times

Even his tone and language has marked a departure for the usually reserved and technical Scholz, who pledged to use a “bazooka” to help struggling companies and get Europe’s largest economy out of the crisis “with a ka-boom”.

From Reuters

He added, though, that Scholz’s inability to connect with voters remained a weakness: “His talk about bazookas and ka-boom is actually a bit clumsy. You can’t change the way you think, talk and act, just like that.”

From Reuters