raid

/reɪd/ (bre, ipa) · /reɪd/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈrād/ (ame, mw)

raid — noun

  • raidsingular
  • raidsplural

1. A short, targeted assault on an enemy position carried out by ground troops, nav

1.名詞B2
釋義

A short, targeted assault on an enemy position carried out by ground troops, naval vessels, or warplanes, with the aim of destroying the objective and withdrawing without lingering.

例句

The air force carried out a raid on the enemy's main supply depot.

collocation: carry out a raid on [place]

Sahil's grandfather survived a Viking raid on his coastal village.

historical context: Viking raid

同義詞
  • attack

    Broader term — covers any act of aggression, not necessarily short or surprise-based

  • assault

    Emphasises close, violent confrontation, often against people rather than a fixed position

  • incursion

    More formal; suggests crossing into enemy territory without intent to stay

  • strike

    Often used for precision attacks by aircraft or missiles

反義詞
  • retreat

    The act of pulling back from enemy contact, opposite of attacking forward

文法句型

raid + on + [place]

carry out / launch + a raid

用法筆記

Common in military news reports. The target is typically a specific facility such as a depot, camp, or base, not a broad area of fighting.

常見錯誤

The army carried out a raid that lasted for three weeks.
The army carried out a raid that was over in a few hours.
💡A raid is brief by definition, unlike a full-scale battle or campaign.

2. An illegal entry into a shop, bank, or home with the intention of stealing money

2.名詞B2
釋義

An illegal entry into a shop, bank, or home with the intention of stealing money or valuable goods, often carried out quickly.

例句

Thieves carried out a raid on a jewellery store and escaped with diamonds worth millions.

collocation: carry out a raid on [store]

The bank hired extra guards after a failed raid last month.

同義詞
  • burglary

    The legal term for entering a building to steal; less emphasis on speed or surprise

  • robbery

    Can involve people directly (e.g. bank robbery); broader scope than raid

  • heist

    Informal; suggests a large, carefully planned theft, often of high value

  • break-in

    Focuses on the method of entry rather than the act of stealing

文法句型

raid + on + [building]

a + [type] + raid

用法筆記

Often used with 'carry out', 'conduct', or 'plan' as the verb. Unlike 'burglary', which focuses on the legal crime, 'raid' emphasises speed and the element of surprise.

常見錯誤

Three men raided the old lady on the street.
Three men robbed the old lady on the street.
💡'Raid' is used for places (buildings, shops, banks), not for individual people.

3. A sudden entry by law enforcement officers into a building or area, conducted wi

3.名詞B2
釋義

A sudden entry by law enforcement officers into a building or area, conducted without warning so that they can search for evidence of a crime, illegal items, or people they want to arrest.

例句

Police carried out a dawn raid on a suspected drug warehouse.

collocation: dawn raid

Abigail's apartment was searched during a police raid on the whole building.

同義詞
  • search

    Broader and less dramatic; can be planned or routine, not necessarily sudden

  • bust

    Informal American English; specifically refers to a drug-related police operation

  • sweep

    Suggest a wide-area search across multiple locations, not a single targeted raid

文法句型

raid + on + [building]

a + [type] + raid by the police

用法筆記

Frequently appears as 'dawn raid' or 'police raid' in news headlines. The purpose is usually to seize evidence or make arrests, not merely to ask questions.

常見錯誤

The police raided on the building at midnight.
The police raided the building at midnight.
💡'Raid' as a verb takes a direct object (no preposition 'on'). As a noun, 'a raid on [place]' is correct.

4. A coordinated move by a group of traders to sell a company's shares all at once,

4.名詞C1
釋義

A coordinated move by a group of traders to sell a company's shares all at once, forcing the price down so they can buy them back more cheaply later.

例句

A group of investors organised a raid that drove the company's share price down sharply.

financial term: organised raid on shares

Mauricio lost money when a raid by rival traders caused the stock value to crash.

同義詞
  • bear raid

    A subtype of stock raid specifically aimed at driving prices down before buying back

  • cornering the market

    Buying up most of a commodity or stock to control its price; different mechanism from a raid

文法句型

a + [adjective] + raid on + [company/shares]

用法筆記

A specialised finance term. In everyday conversation, 'raid' will almost never be used with this meaning. Common in financial news but avoid it in general English contexts.

常見錯誤

The CEO raided the company's stock.
A group of traders conducted a raid on the company's stock.
💡The subject is the traders, not the company itself.

raid — verb