v
(obsolete, transitive) To rob; to plunder.
n
Plunder taken from an enemy in time of war, or seized by piracy.
v
(Britain, Ireland) To levy a cess.
n
(Australia, informal) A cleaner-upper; a person responsible for cleaning or tidying up.
v
(transitive) to raid, plunder
v
(transitive, intransitive) To ransack or plunder; to prey upon.
v
(transitive) To plunder; to pillage; take spoil from.
n
One who ditches, or abandons.
n
(obsolete) Plunder, booty.
v
(transitive) To steal from the grave of (a person).
v
To plunder, pillage, assault.
n
(archaic) Pillaging, devastation, plunder.
n
A hired killer; a hitwoman or hitman
n
The act of one who wrecks a home; the break-up of a married couple, especially of a family, by tempting either out of their commitment.
n
Alternative form of house plunder [(chiefly Southern US) Miscellaneous household items.]
v
(transitive) To steal (prey, etc.) from animals of the same or another species.
v
(transitive, euphemistic) To acquire from another by theft or force: to steal, to rob.
n
Synonym of sack, the plundering of a city, particularly during war.
n
Alternative form of lootie [(India, chiefly in the plural) An irregular soldier whose main object was plunder; a marauder.]
v
(transitive) To raid and pillage.
n
(military slang) Unauthorized taking of materiel; theft of supplies for use in one's own unit.
v
(archaic, intransitive) To smuggle contraband goods.
v
(obsolete) To make a raid for booty; to maraud.
v
(obsolete) To pillage; to despoil or impoverish.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To loot or plunder by force, especially in time of war.
n
(obsolete) A plunderer or thief.
n
(obsolete) plunder; pillage
v
Alternative form of pickeer [(obsolete) To make a raid for booty; to maraud.]
n
Alternative spelling of plute [(colloquial, Australia, US) A plutocrat, especially a rich industrialist.]
v
(transitive) To pillage, take or destroy all the goods of, by force (as in war); to raid, sack.
n
(maritime law) The embezzlement of goods on shipboard.
v
(obsolete) To extort from; to plunder; to strip.
v
(obsolete, slang) To steal; to rob; to filch.
v
(intransitive, obsolete) To search or prowl after; to rob; to plunder.
v
Obsolete form of prowl. [(transitive, intransitive) To rove over, through, or about in a stealthy manner; especially, to search in, as for prey or booty.]
v
(transitive, obsolete) To collect by plunder.
n
Obsolete form of piller. [(obsolete) A plunderer or thief.]
n
One who exacts rack rent.
n
An attack or invasion for the purpose of making arrests, seizing property, or plundering.
v
To break into premises, for the purpose of robbery, by ramming a heavy vehicle through a door, window or wall.
v
To violate; to ravish; to deflower.
n
The seizure of someone's property by force; pillage, plunder.
n
(obsolete) One who ravishes or plunders.
v
(transitive) To pillage or sack something, to lay waste to something.
n
(obsolete) One who, or that which, ravens or plunders.
v
(obsolete) To dine or feast upon plunder or goods seized by violence.
v
(archaic) To deprive (a person) of something through theft or violence.
v
(Ireland, historical, transitive) To abduct (a victim) to a room where they are tortured and murdered.
v
To plunder or pillage, especially after capture; to obtain spoils of war from.
n
The instance or action of sacking, pillaging or looting.
v
(transitive) To take (something) as a souvenir, especially illicitly, for example during wartime.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To carry off (goods) by force; to steal.
v
Alternative form of spoil the ship for a ha'p'orth of tar [To have something important fail for want of a small amount of money or effort.]
n
Any profits extracted as the result of winning a war or other military activity.
n
(historical) The spoils taken by a Roman general from an opponent commander, originally after single combat.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To plunder
n
Robbery or plunder in times of war; especially, the authorized act or practice of plundering neutrals at sea.
v
Obsolete form of spoil. [(transitive, archaic) To strip (someone who has been killed or defeated) of their arms or armour.]
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