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Cambridge Dictionary Adds Bath Bomb Entry with Pronunciations, Examples, Translations

Cambridge Dictionary added a full entry for "bath bomb" with UK and US pronunciations, example sentences, collocations and translations, giving makers a clear, citable reference.

Jamie Taylor2 min read
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Cambridge Dictionary Adds Bath Bomb Entry with Pronunciations, Examples, Translations
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Cambridge Dictionary updated its online dictionary to include a dedicated entry for "bath bomb," offering a concise definition, UK and US pronunciations, example sentences, collocations and translations. The entry defines a bath bomb as a small, effervescent object added to bath water that dissolves with fizzing. The page shows new-words/blog metadata dated January 21, 2026.

This move puts an authoritative, easy-to-cite description in one place, which helps makers, sellers and writers who need consistent language for labels, listings and content. Pronunciation guides for both British and American speakers reduce confusion about how to say the term on videos, workshops and livestreams. Example sentences and collocations give ready-made phrasing you can lift for product descriptions, class notes and social posts without awkward phrasing or guesswork.

The translations included on the entry make it easier to write multilingual listings and reach buyers in cross-border markets. If you ship bath bombs or list them on international marketplaces, having standard translations in the same reference that defines the product cuts time when creating listings or communicating with translators. Related terms and usage examples are also useful when tagging products for search or writing care instructions that customers actually understand.

For the craft community, standardization matters. Cambridge Dictionary’s definition emphasizes the fizzy, dissolving action that hobbyists chase when balancing citric acid and sodium bicarbonate, molding, scent and color. Clear examples and collocations can help you choose terms that match how shoppers search, such as focusing on fizz, scent notes, skin-safe ingredients and presentation.

Use the entry as a quick reference when drafting product labels, teaching a beginner workshop, or scripting a short demo video. Update your product pages to reflect the pronunciation guides and example phrasing so descriptions read like the rest of the marketplace and reduce returns caused by misunderstandings. If you sell internationally, copy the translations into your marketplace listings to improve clarity and reduce buyer questions.

Cambridge Dictionary’s addition signals another step toward mainstream recognition of bath bombs as both a craft and a commercial product. Check the entry for pronunciation and example language, refresh your listings and workshop materials, and keep using precise, searchable terms so your work bubbles to the top.

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