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"bombora" Definitions
  1. a wave which forms over an underwater rock, sometimes producing a dangerous area of water
  2. an area of rock underwater

40 Sentences With "bombora"

How to use bombora in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bombora" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bombora". Mastering all the usages of "bombora" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Bombora, which printed the book in Russia, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Launch partners include SimilarWeb, Apptopia, BuiltWith, IPqwery, Siftery, Bombora, Owler, Financial Content, TradingView, Enigma, Wayback Machine, and Wikipedia; and in keeping with that list, the types of services that you will be able to access in the marketplace initially will include web traffic stats, tech stack information, app install metrics, IT purchasing data, trending product usage, purchase intent data, patent and trademark filings, stock quotes, government filings and extended background information.
The term Bombora was given wide circulation in 2009 on ABC TV with the airing of a documentary titled Bombora - The Story of Australian Surfing, which received a nomination for the 2010 Logie Awards in Australia. The documentary explored historical dimensions of the relationship between surf culture and Australian cultural identity. "Bombora" is also the title of a popular music instrumental released in 1963 by Australian surf rock band The Atlantics. The term bombora is also used for a sketchy surf spot where waves seem to break on the outside.
In Australia these open ocean reefs are sometimes called Bombora or 'Bommie' waves, after the aboriginal word for offshore reef, 'bombora'. Sometimes reefs which occur in open ocean but which do not breach the surface are also called 'Banks'. The Cortes Bank off California is an example. There are also examples of man-made reefs specifically designed and made for surfing.
In 2000 the group reformed with three of the original members, and continue to release new material and perform in concert. In 2013 the group celebrated the 50th Anniversary of their first album, Bombora and the eponymous single that was their first to chart. A European tour was organised to mark the occasion. 'Bombora' was added to the National Film and Sound Archive's Sounds of Australia registry in 2013.
To the left of the park entrance is the first slide tower, containing three slides by ProSlide Technology: Bombora, Tantrum and T5. All of the slides use four-person cloverleaf-shaped rafts. Bombora is a Tornado Wave slide where riders are taken on an enclosed flume ride before dropping down to the ground and riding up a large wave-shaped surface. Here, riders experience a feeling of weightlessness. The second slide is the T5, a ProSlide Tornado 60.
A "making of" documentary was filmed by Greg Appel, director of Australian documentaries Long Way to the Top and Bombora, voiced by Guy Pearce and aired on Foxtel on 11 August 2011.
Bosanac had left the band in May that year, just weeks before The Atlantics were invited by Bombora Creative MD David Minear to be a part of the Delightful Rain project, with Michael Smith, ex Adelaide band Scandal bass player and free weekly Sydney street press magazine, Drum Media, writer and editor, replacing him. In November 2009, Bombora Creative released a DVD, The Atlantics Live at Freshwater, of an impromptu performance the band did at the end of their recording sessions for Delightful Rain.
They are in the forefront of a new interest in the surf rock music instrumental genre. They have done a number of tours including appearing on Australia's "Long Way to the Top" 50's and 60's Rock revival shows, ABC-TV show, Studio 22, and Bombora was used in the Closing Ceremony at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. They continue to perform live. On 2 December 2006 they appeared live, playing "Bombora", on the ABC Television show, "Delightful Rain", a celebration of four decades of Australian Surf rock music.
Their debut album Church of the Open Sky was released on April 16, 2010 on the independent label Bombora, distributed by MGM. In 2011 his home in Tasmania, designed by architect Stuart Tanner, was featured on the TV series Sandcastles.
View of Bombora, Tantrum and T5 ride exits (Tower 1) On the other side of The Beach is the third tower, featuring five slides also by WhiteWater West: Half Pipe, Typhoon, Tropical Cyclone, The Breakers, and AquaTube. All of the slides on this tower use two- person inline tubes. Half Pipe is a Boomerango of a similar design to Bombora; however, the exit chute from the vertical wall features a small camel hump for a second moment of weightlessness. Typhoon is a Rattler where riders slide down open flume sections before entering two cylinders at right angles.
BomBora is a family steel roller coaster currently operating at Lagoon in Farmington, Utah, United States. It is located just outside Lagoon-A-Beach. The name of the coaster comes from an indigenous Australian term for "a submerged reef" or "a turbulent area of sea over such a reef".
As well the song was covered by a number of overseas bands. This overseas success made The Atlantics Australia's first internationally recognized rock act. October 1963 saw the release of their first LP album, predictably named Bombora. They were to release three more albums from 1963 to 1965.
From 2016 to 2018 the Group partnered with Bombora, a provider of B2B demographic and intent-based data. On October 30, 2017, Marc Osofsky became Aberdeen’s chief executive officer and a member of the board of managers; Gary Skidmore became the chairman of Aberdeen. From 2016 to 2018 the Group partnered with Bombora, a provider of B2B demographic and intent-based data. On October 30, 2017, Marc Osofsky became Aberdeen’s chief executive officer and a member of the board of managers; Gary Skidmore became the chairman of Aberdeen. In December 2018, Aberdeen acquired The Big Willow, an intent data provider. The Big Willow gathers its data in part by tracking 3.7 billion device IDs across over 12 billion web pages.
Dillon has attended major surf riding events in Hawaii, France and UK since his first visit to Hawaii in 1963. He has visited Hawaii every year since 1963. He represented Australia at each Oahu surf championship from 1963 to 1975. He was the first to surf Bare Island Bombora (Botany Bay, Sydney), with an estimated wave height of 10 meters, in 1952.
Matzenik was replaced by Jim Skaithitis while the band was still in its earliest stages. The band's claim to fame was as Australia's most successful of the genre. Most well known for their classic hit, "Bombora", their later recordings such as "Come On" are examples of 1960s garage rock. They were the first Australian rock band to write their own hits.
Tegan Bennett Daylight (born 1969, in Sydney) is an Australian writer of novels and short stories. She is best known as a fiction writer, teacher and critic, publishing both books of non-fiction and numerous short stories. She has also written several books for children and teenagers. She is the author of Bombora (1996), What Falls Away (2001) and Safety (2006).
Two SU-25 of Georgian airforce tried to stifle artillery weapon emplacements that bombed a Sukhumi residential area. Russian military airplane (SU-27) brought down one of them. The pilot R. Naroushvili had time to eject the plane. The pilot of another plane witnessed that Russian fighter, conducting the flight at a height of 2.7 thousand meters, took off from Bombora airport of Gudauta.
Bells Beach, Victoria surfers Mick Corbett riding Cowaramup Bombora, Western Australia, 2014 Australia is renowned as one of the world's premier surfing destinations. Surfing underpins an important part of the Australian coastal fabric. It forms part of a lifestyle in which millions participate and which millions more have an interest. Australian surfboard-makers have driven innovation in surfboard design and production since the mid-1960s.
The B-side was the old traditional English song "Greensleeves". By September 1963, "Bombora" had climbed the Australian charts to reach No 1. It was released in Japan, Italy, Holland, England and New Zealand and in South America. It was nominated as record of the week by US Cashbox magazine and reached No 2 on the Italian charts (where there was even a vocal version released).
Bombora was short-listed for the Australian/Vogel Literary Award and the Kathleen Mitchell Award. In 2002, she was named one of The Sydney Morning Herald’s “Best Young Australian Novelists”. Bennett Daylight's story collection Six Bedrooms, was published by Vintage in 2015 and was shortlisted for the 2016 Stella Prize. Daylight also works as an English lecturer at Charles Sturt University in New South Wales.
The Atlantics, from Sydney, Australia, made a significant contribution to the genre, with their hit "Bombora" (1963). Surf music achieved its greatest commercial success as vocal music, particularly the work of the Beach Boys, formed in 1961 in Southern California. Their early albums included both instrumental surf rock (among them covers of music by Dick Dale) and vocal songs, drawing on rock and roll and doo wop and the close harmonies of vocal pop acts like the Four Freshmen.
In 2009 Walker composed original music for ABC-TV's documentary series, Bombora – The History of Australian Surfing. He contributed music for Mother of Rock: The Life and Times of Lillian Roxon (August 2010), a documentary film on Australian rock music journalist, Lillian Roxon. The film was showcased at that year's Melbourne International Film Festival. Premiering at that festival was a comedy-drama feature film, The Wedding Party, with a soundtrack which included work by Walker and by Bowditch.
Wave loads also diminish in non-linear proportion to the distance below the free surface. This means that by optimizing the depth of submergence for such a converter, a compromise between protection from extreme loads and access to wave energy can be found. Submerged WECs also have the potential to reduce the impact on marine amenity and navigation, as they are not at the surface. Examples of submerged pressure differential converters include M3 Wave, Bombora Wave Power's mWave, and CalWave.
In 2006, he joined fellow Midnight Oil member Rob Hirst's projects Ghostwriters and The Angry Tradesmen. He is also featured – together with Hirst – on the track "Around the world" from fellow Midnight Oil guitarist Jim Moginie's solo debut album "Alas Folkloric". In 2010 Rotsey teamed up with two other former members of Midnight Oil, Hirst and Moginie, and Violent Femmes bass player Brian Ritchie to form a new surf rock band, The Break. Their debut album Church of the Open Sky was released on 16 April 2010 on the independent label Bombora, distributed by MGM.
Mick Corbett surfing Cow Bombie in 2014. (Photo: Jamie Scott) Cowaramup Bombora (also known as Cowie Bombie or simply Cow Bombie) is a big wave open- ocean surf break found on the south-west coast of Western Australia. It is located 2 kilometres offshore west of Gracetown which is near the town of Margaret River, world-renowned for its surf, and is 265 km south of the capital city Perth. The break first came to the world’s attention in 2007, when local Damon Eastaugh won the Big Wave Award after riding a wave estimated to be more than 50 feet.
These included the Astronauts, from Boulder, Colorado; the Trashmen, from Minneapolis, Minnesota, who reached number four with "Surfin' Bird" in 1964; and the Rivieras, from South Bend, Indiana, who reached number five in 1964 with "California Sun". the Atlantics, from Sydney, Australia, were not exclusively surf musicians, but made a significant contribution to the genre, the most famous example being their hit "Bombora", in 1963. Also from Sydney were the Denvermen, whose lyrical instrumental "Surfside" reached number one in the Australian charts."The Denvermen, Sydney, 1961–65", MILESAGO: Australasian Music and Popular Culture 1964–1975, retrieved 18 May 2010.
The best times of day to fish for drummer are usually in the period approaching a high tide, and/or during low light periods such as dawn or dusk. Drummer also seem to be more active during rougher ocean conditions, although anglers must be especially vigilant for their safety when fishing during higher seas. To catch drummer, anglers firstly need to identify a location that is relatively safe to fish and appears likely to hold drummer, generally deeper water adjacent to a bombora. Fish are then attracted through the use of a bread-based berley stream.
The Delltones with four radio awards, (l to r) Warren Lucas (tenor), Ian (Peewee) Wilson (bass), Brian Perkins (baritone) and Col Loughnan (lead) By the latter part of 1963 surf music dominated the Australian Charts, particularly in Sydney and Brisbane. The Delltones were quick to release the tongue in cheek composition, "Hangin' Five", written by Ben Acton who was a police officer and also a lifesaver with Manly Surf Club and a member of the police band. This release was almost as successful as "Come A Little Bit Closer" – reaching number 3. "Hangin' Five" became a cult classic in California along with The Atlantics instrumental "Bombora".
It doesn't break often, requiring huge swells from the Southern Ocean, but these can produce very large waves often in excess of 40 ft with some contending for the biggest wave in Australia at over 60 ft. Its name comes from Cowaramup, the name of the small local townsite, and bombora, an Indigenous Australian term for an area of large sea waves breaking over a shallow area. The break was featured in the 2013 documentary series Storm Surfers 3D which described it as "on its day, the tallest wave in Australia", where Tom Carroll survived a near-death wipeout while surfing with Ross Clarke-Jones. It also featured in the 2011 documentary film Fighting Fear.
On stage the band maintained their reputation at concerts and beachside surf clubs with an exciting, pounding sound combined with a stage act that included them all playing their guitars behind their heads and Theo and Jim on opposite sides of the stage swapping lead lines with one another. In November 1963 they released the follow-up, another similar thundering surf instrumental, "The Crusher" which, while not quite as successful as Bombora, still made a respectable dent in the Australian charts. Their fourth single, "War of the Worlds" however was a total break with the surf sound. Released in March 1964, it was unlike any other of their tracks, or indeed any other instrumentals of the day.
By this time the surfing music craze had reached Australia's shores and a host of local bands such as The Statesmen, Jimmy D & the Starlighters (a.k.a. Jimmy D & the Jaguars), The Midnighters, The Telstars, Dave Bridge Trio, The Joy Boys and The Denvermen were all releasing surfing titled instrumental tracks, and in particular, The Denvermen's evocative ballad "Surfside", which had topped Australia's charts in February 1963. In July 1963 The Atlantics released the single that would become their biggest hit, most well-known song and one which remains a classic of its genre to this day. The monstrous, pounding, driving "Bombora" was written by Peter and Jim and was named after an Aboriginal term for large waves breaking over submerged rock shelves.
The Bomboras took their name from a classic surf instrumental by the Original Surfaris (not to be confused with a different song with the same title, "Bombora," by the Australian surf combo The Atlantics) and released several albums on Burbank-based indie label Dionysus Records between 1995 and 1997. In summer 1997 Rob Zombie took notice of the band and signed them to his then newly formed Zombie a Go-Go label, which was distributed by Geffen Records. The Bomboras finally called it quits in 2000 with some of the members forming the Lords of Altamont and some members formed The Legendary Invisible Men. Drummer Dave Klein is currently playing drums with legendary surf/punk band Agent Orange and produces bands at Dave Klein Recording, his private studio in Los Angeles.
In 2008, surfers and environmentalists opposed a toll road project in Orange County, California that would have changed sediment patterns and affected the world-class Trestles surf break north of San Onofre State Beach which attracted 400,000 surfers in 2007. In 2007, the NSW Geographical Names Register began formally recognizing names of surf breaks in Australia, defining a surf break as a "permanent obstruction such as a reef, headland, bombora, rock or sandbar, which causes waves to break". One of the largest surf breaks in the world is the Jaws surf break in Maui, Hawaii, with waves that reach a maximum height of . However waves which break off Nazaré in Portugal have been recorded to exceed , with estimates of waves ridden up to over , from trough to peak.
The vessel struck the Doboy reef about three-quarters of a mile from the shore the steamer ran ashore on a fungus-growth patch at the northernmost end of Cronulla Beach and the crew took a line ashore. This was made fast to a tree, the vessel being about 50 or 60 yards from the land When talking about the grounding of the Marjorie the site was described as > The only inhabitants are a handful of fisher folk, who manage to keep their > craft in a little rockbound inlet called Boat Harbour. It is hard by that > the Marjorie struck-a mile to the south of the Koonya wreck some years ago. > She just missed the main reef In the vicinity-the Doughboy bombora-and > managed to run into a narrow and shallow channel in the Merries.
Australian Music Centre - Australian Composer Biography: Sven Libaek In 1963 Libaek was hired by the newly established CBS Records (Australia), which had been incorporated following the 1960 takeover of the Australian Record Company by Columbia Records in the United States. During his tenure as musical director and A&R; manager for CBS (as well as general manager for April Music Publishing in Sydney) Libaek built up a strong roster of pop, folk and jazz performers and produced over two hundred singles and albums, as well as writing (or co-writing with his wife) many of the titles he produced. His CBS credits include producing all the CBS recordings by surf music band the Atlantics including their hit "Bombora", folk musicians Gary Shearston and Patsy Biscoe. He left CBS in 1968 to work as a freelance composer, arranger, conductor and established his own music production company.
The Margaret River area has acquired a range of synonyms for the collection of surf breaks nearby, with some 75 breaks along of coastline.Blair, Larry and Horan, Cheyne Wave Finder Australia (3rd edition) give the name Margarets Area to the Cape Naturaliste to Boranup Sandpatch area and identify over 30 named breaks Usually significant surfing competitions concentrate their locale to Margarets Main Break (aka Surfers Point) which breaks in the vicinity of Prevelly at the mouth of Margaret River. The actual range of surf breaks range from the eastern side of Cape Naturaliste down to just south of Cape Hamelin, and despite web sites and online sources calling the whole Cape Naturaliste to Cape Leeuwin region the Margaret River surfing area, conditions and break types vary along the coast. The Cowaramup Bombora ("Cow Bombie") big wave surf break offshore produces one of the biggest waves in Australia.
These tracks subsequently appeared on various compilation albums, such as Wheels (Diplomat Records LP 2309); The World of Surfin' (Almor LP 108); Surf's Up at Banzai Pipeline (Northridge Records LP 101); and others. After some months, the band again went into the studio with Hilder producing and recorded a number of tracks intended to be released on the Impact label, as their first full-length LP. Two of the tracks, "Bombora"Not related musically to The Atlantics' 1963 hit by the same name and "Surfari" were leased to Del-Fi Records, which sent them out as a single. But the record, even though it started selling well in the state had to be pulled from the stores because of a lawsuit. It was in early 1963 that, while the band were on the road, the surf instrumental "Wipe Out" came out and broke big nationwide.
Given this, and given the fact that after the shootdown, the radar record showed the aircraft heading north towards Maykop/Krasnodar into Russian airspace, and in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the fact-finding team concluded that the aircraft belonged to the Russian air force. The fact finding mission was unable to determine whether, as Georgia claimed, the aircraft had taken off from the Bombora military airfield near Gudauta. It said that this was possible, but that another scenario was that the jet aircraft had come in at low altitude from somewhere else and then ascended in the vicinity of Gudauta. The fact- finding mission further judged that > “a reconnaissance mission by a military aircraft, whether manned or > unmanned, constituted “military action” and therefore contravened the Moscow > Agreement.” “However legitimate this purpose may seem to the Georgian side, > it stands to reason that this kind of military intelligence-gathering is > bound to be interpreted by the Abkhaz side as a precursor to a military > operation, particularly in a period of tense relations between the sides.” UNOMIG's fact-finding commission confirmed that debris from the March 18 and May 12 shootdowns also originated from Hermes 450 aircraft.
In reaction to the fact-finding team's report, Georgian President Saakashvili welcomed its conclusions: > “The UN issued a conclusion, which directly accuses the Russian Federation > of an act of aggression against Georgia and confirms that Russian jet has > bombed the Georgian territory. This is the first case when an international > organization and especially UN, without general phrases, has directly > pointed its finger at Russia.” On May 27, the Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that Georgia > “categorically demands from the Russian Federation to make an official > apology for the act of aggression directed against Georgia, ensure > appropriate compensation for the material loss.” The Ministry also renewed demands for an international inspection of the Gudauta military base (Bombora airfield), from which it claimed the fighter jet took off on April 20. On May 29, Georgia's Ambassador to the United Nations Irakli Alasania labelled the April 20 shootdown “an aggressive military act” that had further undermined Russia's role of mediator and facilitator. He also stated that Georgia did not consider overflights of unmanned, unarmed reconnaissance aircraft over the conflict zone violation of the Moscow agreement, since it was Georgia's "sovereign right" to observe and monitor its territory and “illegal movement” of Abkhazian and Russian forces.

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