Bonnet in a sentence as a noun

The front edge of the bonnet was marginal to poor.

But I am clearly a bee in the bonnet of some of the kinds of people who review books in America.

Or just use two microphones—one aimed at the windshield and one at the bonnet—and subtract one from the other.

Johnlepson, on the other hand, seems to have a bee in his bonnet about the US not being a nation state.

I've never popped a bonnet open".My next thought would probably be, "Err, are you really sure you want to flash your car's ECU?

The centre of the bonnet offered good protection to a child's head but poorer protection towards the edges.

Also, it's partly for the Chrome/Rust divide of web browsers -- Rust is designed for the "below-the-bonnet", "plumbing" parts.

Bonnet in a sentence as a verb

One could interpret Apple's move as an incremental step towards a future where a car's value is inside the cabin, not under the bonnet.

The car factory doesn't weld closed the bonnet of its vehicles and the farmer doesn't whine about lost profits because I dare to have a herb garden in my back yard.

> Although Southwest was once considered a pioneer amongst low-cost carriers, it has remained just that; a dated, bonnet-wearing airline.

Actually, I believe that the biggest bee in bin Laden's bonnet was the Americans' use of Saudi territory for military bases.

But even aside from that, the future has a way of surprising us, and I wouldn't like the be stuck with outdated tech in 2018 because webdevs in 2013 got a bee in their bonnet about webkit vs gecko.

Benign merely denotes non-maliciousness I would call this a benevolent bonnet.

Remember when mirrors were on the wings, miles down the bonnet, ideally positioned to injure pedestrians and impossible to adjust from inside the car?That is what you need but with iPads bungee-corded onto them, the display showing the camera video.

Bonnet definitions

noun

a hat tied under the chin

noun

protective covering consisting of a metal part that covers the engine; "there are powerful engines under the hoods of new cars"; "the mechanic removed the cowling in order to repair the plane's engine"

See also: hood cowl cowling

verb

dress in a bonnet