0 past simple and past participle of double-cross --
1 to deceive someone by working only for your own advantage in the (usually illegal) activities you have planned together: --
When he tries to deliver the parcel, he realizes that he has been double-crossed, and that his former boss is now a double agent.
He was promised a pardon, but was double-crossed and locked up with those he captured.
Giuseppe suspects that he is being double-crossed by his once faithful friend.
She double-crossed him and stole the circuit templates, intending to sell them herself.
Tracking down the agent who double-crossed him, and eluding the police simultaneously, he becomes both the hunter and the hunted.
On one occasion it concerned a member who had been double-crossed by his campaign manager.
To put it bluntly, have we not been double-crossed by them?
Unless he does so, how can the doctors avoid fearing that there is a chance of their being double-crossed?