bombo


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bombo

(ˈbɒməʊ)
n
a cheap or inferior wine
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Egco said they are also looking into a possible connection between the fatal ambush of Dizon and the attack almost three weeks ago at the broadcast facility in General Santos City of Bombo Radyo, also critical of Kapa's operation.
A gunman strafed the broadcast studio of Bombo Radyo DxES here Wednesday night, July 3, police said.
Undersecretary Joel Egco, executive of the Presidential Task Force on Media Security, ordered the local police to get to the bottom of the attack on the office of the Bombo Radyo Gensan on Amao Road, Barangay Bula, this city, at around 8:30 p.m.
This culminated in inter-communal fighting that came to be known as the Kaya Bombo clashes.
In the same year, Pte Patrick Odoch killed 11 people near Bombo UPDF headquarters over similar reasons.
Malevo is composed of a group of eight men from Buenos Aires, Argentina, that do the Malambo, a traditional dance performed to the beat of the bombo leguero drum.
Former Bombo Radyo broadcaster Nelson Canete is now the regional director of National Telecommunications Office.
Examples such as Tango are known over the world, but there's also Argentina's Zamba (not to be confused with Samba), which combines guitars with a powerful drum known as the bombo leguero.
The last chapter ("Male Subjectivity and the Legacy of 1968: Nanni Moretti's Ecce Bombo") examines Moretti's use of irony in relating to the present and revisiting the recent past, professing sheer intolerance to all forms of empty rhetoric, but also deep attachment (however with no nostalgia) to the political enthusiasm of 1968.