From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishfusilladefu‧sil‧lade /ˌfjuːzəˈleɪd $ -sə-/ noun [countable usually singular] 1 CPMWa quick series of shots fired from a gun, or a quick series of other objects that are thrownfusillade of a fusillade of bullets2 TALK TO somebodya quick series of questions or remarks
Examples from the Corpus
fusillade• She aligned the sights of her rifle and loosed a fusillade of bolts that split the rocks apart.• Desktop publishing was only the opening salvo of a fusillade of developments that would change the way people worked.• At the beginning of the Secretary of State for the Environment's speech there was a fusillade of Government interventions.• Windows were blasted inwards by the fusillade.fusillade of• Ms. Hills ran into a fusillade of hostile questions at Tuesday's committee meeting.• The first officers who burst into the house were met with a fusillade of bullets.Origin fusillade (1800-1900) French fusiller “to shoot”, from Late Latin focus “fire”