0 present participle of lunge
1 to move forward suddenly and with force, especially in order to attack someone:
Within-species interactions were somewhat more common, consisting of displacements of feeding individuals by lunging or pouncing.
Aggressive behaviour consisted of biting, lunging and grappling; these behaviours were usually all expressed in an aggressive interaction.
Avant garde theorists may think they are lunging at finance capitalists but it is the small saver who will get the black eye.
To count, all strokes must be with the cane, and low blows must have a lunging movement.
They can not pull their hind-flippers forward, and move on land by lunging, bouncing and wiggling while their fore-flippers keep them balanced.
They perform an elaborate display that includes wing fluttering, jumping, standing upright, crouching with ruff erect, or lunging at rivals.
Out of the three techniques, the most frequently used technique for hunting insects was found to be lunging and grabbing exposed prey.
They attack potential predators by flying at them and lunging with their large bills.