1. ambulance - Noun
2. ambulance - Verb
A field hospital, so organized as to follow an army in its movements, and intended to succor the wounded as soon as possible. Often used adjectively; as, an ambulance wagon; ambulance stretcher; ambulance corps.
An ambulance wagon or cart for conveying the wounded from the field, or to a hospital.
Source: Webster's dictionaryI was very, very sick when I was growing up in Russia. The ambulance constantly came to our house. I had horrible asthma that is easily treated in America, but they didn't even have inhalers back in Russia. Gary Shteyngart
An old sergeant said, if you want to get to France in a hurry, then join the ambulance service, the French are big for ambulance service. Frank Buckles
My job driving the ambulance was not very severe, you did what you were supposed to do. That was my main job. Frank Buckles
I remember nothing of this, no ambulance rides, nothing. Nothing between switching out the bedside lamp and the sudden indignity of rebirth: the slaps, the brightness, the tubing, the speed, the urgent insistence that I be choked back into breathing life. I have felt so sorry for babies ever since. Stephen Fry
But where does by far the bulk, the whole ambulance load, of pain really come from? Where must it come from? Isn't the true poet or painter a seer? Isn't he, actually, the only seer we have on earth? Most apparently not the scientist, most emphatically not the psychiatrist. J. D. Salinger
We say here that if you fall down in the United States, the ambulance man must feel for your wallet before he feels for your pulse. George Galloway