am·bush
ˈam-ˌbu̇sh
ambushed; ambushing; ambushes
1
: to attack by surprise from a hidden place : waylay
Our troops ambushed the enemy units.
… his caravan that season had been ambushed and shot at twice on the way down …—
Rudyard Kipling
2
: to station in ambush (see ambush entry 2 sense 2)
… the enemy had crossed the river and ambushed themselves in the prairie.—
Benjamin Drake
: to lie in wait : lurk
ambusher
noun
plural ambushes
1
: a trap in which one or more concealed attackers lie in wait to attack by surprise
soldiers caught in an ambush
Suddenly a shout comes down the line: "Contact front!" It's an ambush, with gunmen on both sides of the road.—
Lev Grossman
2
: the concealed position from which a surprise attack is made
a group of soldiers lying in ambush
… tanks alone are vulnerable to opposing infantry with antitank weapons, particularly at night when the infantry can more easily wait in ambush or approach unseen.—
Neil Sheehan
also
: an individual or group concealed for a surprise attack
All was then dead silence; for, loquacious as he was on other occasions, Captain Dalgetty knew well the necessity of an ambush keeping itself under covert. —
Robert Burns
3
: the act of approaching or confronting someone with something unexpected
—often used before another noun
ambush journalism
… did not return calls or e-mails and was hostile when a television crew conducted an ambush interview several years ago.—
Neely Tucker
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Merriam-Webster unabridged




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