What is another word for outflanked?

Pronunciation: [a͡ʊtflˈaŋkt] (IPA)

Outflanked refers to the act of getting around or bypassing someone or something. There are several synonyms that can be used in place of outflanked. These include outmaneuvered, surrounded, encircled, ambushed, flanked, and besieged. Outmaneuvered implies an adept strategic move that has rendered the opponent unable to react. Surrounded means that someone is enclosed on all sides, either physically or figuratively. Encircled gives a sense of being hemmed in by a group of people or things. Ambushed refers to an unexpected attack from an unseen location. Flanked means being attacked from the side. Besieged implies a state of siege, where someone is under a state of confinement.

What are the hypernyms for Outflanked?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Outflanked

The fighting off Artemisium had shown the peril of attacking a greatly superior force in the open because of the danger of being outflanked.
"A History of Sea Power"
William Oliver Stevens and Allan Westcott
Nothing daunted, the Confederates drew out their troops in front of the fort of Ghausgarh, and at once engaged the Imperial troops, whom they at the same time outflanked with a large body of horse, who got into the rear of the Imperialists without being perceived.
"Fall-of-the-Moghul-Empire-of-Hindustan"
Keene, H. G. (Henry George)
It was little grief, as can be imagined, that the events of the next few weeks brought to Greenwood; and the day the news came that Washington's force had been outflanked and successfully driven from its position on the hills of Brooklyn, with a loss of two of its best brigades, the squire was so jubilant that nothing would do but to have up a bottle of his best Madeira,- a wine hitherto never served except to guests of distinction.
"Janice Meredith"
Paul Leicester Ford

Famous quotes with Outflanked

  • I have been outflanked by the culture. I am now seen as a drawling Oxonian, and a genetic elitist, who took over the family firm. People subconsciously think that I was born in 1922, wrote when I was 7, and will live for at least a century. This feels odd to me, because my father was a "angry young man" and helped democratize the British novel. I'm not a toff. I'm a yob.
    Martin Amis
  • He had that self-reproachful feeling of having been remiss which comes to Generals who wake up one morning to discover that they have carelessly allowed themselves to be outflanked.
    P. G. Wodehouse

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