Bonanza in a sentence as a noun

I've never flown a bonanza, but the 'doctor killer' [1] has quite a reputation.

Heh, this should be 'competitor threatens lawsuit, hands over PR bonanza.

The putatively brilliant bit is in taking the C&D and turning it into a PR bonanza, which he has.

It takes 5 years for an almond orchard to bear fruit, so all the bonanza-chasers who planted after 2005 are just coming online.

The resource bonanza of digging up Australia and selling it to China has not much to do with good management.

You say that now - and the inevitable procurement carve-up bonanza hasn't even started yet!

There's a Bitcoin company which I will elide naming that is, perhaps unintentionally, a carder cash out bonanza.

Their existence was conjured up from previous bonanzas, or the expectation of potential bonanzas.

It would be, from an economist's point of view, the Pennsylvania oil fields of man-hours, a beautiful gusher, a bonanza of reverie washing upon our shores.

Eliminate the potential for such bonanzas and you don't free up value for impactful redeployment elsewhere: the value never even exists.

It makes me hope that the Web is finally maturing to the point of having a common, uniform UI patterns for its applications.\nIf Bootstrap helps to alleviate the design & UX bonanza that many of the present day web apps still is, it will be just another stone in its awesomeness bucket.

Bonanza definitions

noun

an especially rich vein of precious ore

noun

a sudden happening that brings good fortune (as a sudden opportunity to make money); "the demand for testing has created a boom for those unregulated laboratories where boxes of specimen jars are processed like an assembly line"

See also: boom gravy godsend windfall bunce