: marked by or given to speech or writing that is given exaggerated importance by artificial or empty means : marked by or given to bombast: pompous, overblown
The spots that ran before the title game were even more bombastic: "The greatest rivalry ever …"—Franz Lidz
a bombastic speech intended to impress the voters in her congressional district
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The 77-year-old monarch faced a number of possible pitfalls from a bombastic US president known for creating controversy and generating headlines at the lowest moment for US-UK relations in modern history.—Max Foster, CNN Money, 1 May 2026 Woodman is known for being bombastic, but GoPro's track record in making indestructible camera gear is unmatched.—Jim Fisher, PC Magazine, 20 Apr. 2026 Steinman’s music has always been described as big, bombastic, and operatic.—Jed Gottlieb, Boston Herald, 19 Apr. 2026 But the English-speaking pontiff has risen as an influential American critic living in the Vatican, using his platform on the world stage as a moral contrast to the president's more bombastic rhetoric and aggressive use of executive power.—Terry Collins, USA Today, 12 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for bombastic