Bonanza

/bəˈnæn.zə/

"Bonanza" in a Sentence (7 examples)

"Bonanza" is not about bananas. Or maybe it is. It's a famous western series.

The bonanza has ended in Algeria.

The coronavirus pandemic turned out to be a bonanza for billionaires.

The popular show quickly became a ratings bonanza for the network.

For two decades the bonanza on Scotland’s west coast continued. An occupation that had been seasonal and modestly profitable became year-round and lucrative. Baskets of herring put televisions into fishermen’s cottages and cars outside their doors. But fish, like oil and gas, with which Scotland’s continental shelf is also well-endowed, are not in unlimited supply.

It has also yielded a bonanza for corporate executives and other shareholders: Money not spent filling warehouses with unneeded auto parts is, at least in part, money that can be given to shareholders in the form of dividends.

His [D. Trump's] domestic policy bill allocated a record $1 trillion to defense in 2026, including for technology such as autonomous drones. Silicon Valley executives and venture capitalists are eagerly eying that bonanza.

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