20 collocations for ambushing

A GOOD HORSE A BIG JOKE AMBUSHING THE INDIANS WHOA THERE!

Elena Wilson (W); 4Jan73; R542972. Ambushing a best-seller: The turquoise.

On the 27th Cresap and his followers ambushed these men near Captina, and killed and scalped them.

The victors camped on the ground with the intention of ambushing any party that arrived to bury the dead; for they were confident some of the settlers would come for this purpose.

Elena Wilson (W); 4Jan73; R542972. Ambushing a best-seller: The turquoise.

I loved the trade; Far other is this battle in the waste, Wherein, each night, though not of course afraid, I wriggle round with ill-concealed distaste, Where who can say what menace is not nigh, What ambushed foe, what unexploded crump, And the glad worm, aspiring to the sky, Emerges suddenly and makes you jump.

But the figures of men, pacing back and forth, showed that the watch had not been neglected, although in the deep forest such sentinels would be but little protection against the kind of ambush the French and Indians were able to lay.

Some of them had been harassing Cleavland, and they had ambushed his advance guard, and shot his brother, crippling him for life.

Moreover, the Spanish battalions met with such obstruction from the deep morasses on one side, and the dark and tangled thickets on the other, and such opposition from the Indians and ambushed Highlanders, that every effort failed, with considerable loss.

There could be no surer sign that Mukoki and Rod were still among the living, for why should the Woongas employ this caution if they had already successfully ambushed the hunters?

" "What securities are those?" asked her employer, hanging his tall hat on the antiquated mahogany coat tree in the corner opposite the screen that ambushed the washing apparatus.

He undertook at one time to ambush Labienus, and after a defeat in battle was persuaded to hold a conference with him.

In the spring of 1775 the Massachusetts Provincial Congress sent Samuel Kirkland to exhort the Iroquois 'to whet their hatchet and be prepared to defend our liberties and lives'; while Ethan Allen asked the Indians round Vermont to treat him 'like a brother and ambush the regulars.'

At first they were content to ambush single soldiers who strayed into obscure quarters after dark.

Masters in the art of hiding, and able to conceal themselves behind a bush, a stone, or a tuft of weeds, they skulked round the gate before dawn, to shoot the white sentinels; or they ambushed the springs, and killed those who came for water; they slaughtered all of the cattle that had not been driven in, and any one venturing incautiously beyond the walls was certain to be waylaid and murdered.

[Illustration: AMBUSHING THE INDIANS.]

They shot the solitary settlers who had gone out to till their clearings by stealth, or ambushed the boys who were driving in the milk cows or visiting their lines of traps.

I loved the trade; Far other is this battle in the waste, Wherein, each night, though not of course afraid, I wriggle round with ill-concealed distaste, Where who can say what menace is not nigh, What ambushed foe, what unexploded crump, And the glad worm, aspiring to the sky, Emerges suddenly and makes you jump.

I think they stood behind a tree to ambush a deer.

There was just this one good thing about the parched and famished wilderness, that it relieved the emigrants from all fear of ambushing enemies.

20 collocations for  ambushing