fusillade

noun·/ˌfjuː.zɪˈleɪd/

A rapid, sustained outburst. Originally gunfire, now extended to words, blows, questions, or accusations delivered in quick succession. Where a single shot or remark is pointed, a fusillade overwhelms by quantity and pace.

A fusillade of emails arrived before breakfast, each one demanding urgency like a siren.

Etymology

From French fusillade, from fusil “musket,” ultimately from Italian fucile “fire-steel.” The term moved from literal firing to metaphorical barrage, keeping the sense of repeated impact.

Related Words

barragea near-synonym with broader military and figurative use
volleya coordinated burst; sometimes more orderly
salvoa simultaneous discharge; often more punctuated
diatribeverbal attack; more sustained argument than rapid fire