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BNC: 19372 COCA: 21088

pillage

1 ENTRIES FOUND:
pillage /ˈpɪlɪʤ/ verb
pillages; pillaged; pillaging
pillage
/ˈpɪlɪʤ/
verb
pillages; pillaged; pillaging
Learner's definition of PILLAGE
: to take things from (a place, such as a city or town) by force especially during a war : to loot or plunder (a place)抢劫;掠夺
[+ object]
[no object]

— pillage

noun [noncount]

— pillager

noun, plural pillagers [count]
BNC: 19372 COCA: 21088

pillage

1 of 2

noun

pil·​lage ˈpi-lij How to pronounce pillage (audio)
1
: the act of looting or plundering especially in war
2
: something taken as booty

pillage

2 of 2

verb

pillaged; pillaging

transitive verb

: to plunder ruthlessly : loot

intransitive verb

: to take booty
pillager noun

Did you know?

The Various Uses of Pilfer

Pilfer is a synonym of steal, but it typically implies a particular kind of stealing. What is pilfered is usually stolen stealthily—furtively, so that no one will notice—in small amounts and often again and again. One might, for example, pilfer cookies from a cookie jar until a plentiful supply has dwindled to nothing. The word is sometimes used for that kind of stealing: the stealthy and gradual stealing of something that isn't worth much anyway:

Money was tight enough that Dickey's family used silverware pilfered from the local Western Sizzlin….
— L. Jon Wertheim, Sports Illustrated 2 Apr. 2012

But it is also used when the stolen things are valuable indeed, and the act of pilfering a serious criminal act:

For generations, scavengers have prowled this city with impunity, pouncing on abandoned properties and light poles to pilfer steel, copper and other metals they could trade for cash at scrapyards. The practice left tens of thousands of buildings so damaged that they could not be restored, turning places like the North End into grim cityscapes that appeared to have been ravaged by a tornado.
— John Eligon, The New York Times, 15 Mar. 2015

Pilfer may remind one of a similar also-serious word: pillage. The two words share more than a first syllable; pilfer comes from an old word meaning "booty" (as in, things that are stolen or taken by force, especially during a war) and pillage means "to take things from a place by force especially during a war." But despite their similarities, the words in modern use are very different. Pilfer has long since shed the connotations of violence in its etymological past; what's pilfered is not taken violently. Pillage, on the other hand, remains firmly rooted in violence and especially war; it is not a term you apply when someone's been sneaking cookies from a cookie jar.

Choose the Right Synonym for pillage

ravage, devastate, waste, sack, pillage, despoil mean to lay waste by plundering or destroying.

ravage implies violent often cumulative depredation and destruction.

a hurricane ravaged the coast

devastate implies the complete ruin and desolation of a wide area.

an earthquake devastated the city

waste may imply producing the same result by a slow process rather than sudden and violent action.

years of drought had wasted the area

sack implies carrying off all valuable possessions from a place.

barbarians sacked ancient Rome

pillage implies ruthless plundering at will but without the completeness suggested by sack.

settlements pillaged by Vikings

despoil applies to looting or robbing without suggesting accompanying destruction.

the Nazis despoiled the art museums

Example Sentences

Noun the pirate ship was laden with the pillage of merchant ships from across the Spanish Main Verb The enemy pillaged the town. The town was pillaged and burned. barbarians known for looting and pillaging
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
In retaliation, British forces began a brutal occupation of the city that led to many casualties and widespread destruction and pillage. Jane Recker, Smithsonian Magazine, 21 Mar. 2022 Reckless human enterprise is killing Earth’s wild songmakers at alarming rates, using poisons, bulldozers, forest-clearing fires and industrial-scale pillage of prey species. Amy Brady, Scientific American, 23 Feb. 2022 What about the actual diabolical activity—the violence, the rape, the pillage, the sheer wastage of lives? James Wood, The New Yorker, 24 Jan. 2022 But writing a history of empire, pillage, bloodthirstiness and dogma cannot be done in a vacuum, ignoring the dark side of their appeal. Washington Post, 17 Dec. 2021 The idea of a paradise lost — or, more accurately, stolen and desecrated, the M.O. of centuries of colonial pillage — looms large here, and its fallout is all around. Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com, 11 Nov. 2021 Murder, rape, pillage, and enslavement were common. Claire Messud, Harper's Magazine, 26 Oct. 2021 The Republican Party, including members who had denounced Trump during the 2016 primaries, followed him zombie-like on his pillage-and-burn mission. Mark Lilla, The New York Review of Books, 5 Nov. 2020 The Genghis Khans who come to rape and pillage are never good for the Bristol Bay fishery. John Schandelmeier, Anchorage Daily News, 31 July 2021
Verb
But New Orleans does, including a Week 2 opportunity to pillage the Bucs (again) at the Superdome, and can make a very early case that reclamation of the NFC South throne is coming. Nate Davis, USA TODAY, 9 Sep. 2022 The pace is so speedy that deer must pillage minerals from other parts of their skeleton, only to cast their antlers away and sprout a new pair when the seasons turn once more. Katherine J. Wu, The Atlantic, 2 Aug. 2022 These days, mead maniacs are less apt to pillage villages than lead campaigns on behalf of their essential, yet unpaid, workers: the bees who visit flowers and other plants to collect the nectar that becomes honey. Peter Rowe, San Diego Union-Tribune, 25 Mar. 2022 Gaming for adults, players will create their characters together at the first session before joining the crew of Pirates of Palm Beach to plunder and pillage the lands of fantasy. Cindy Kent, sun-sentinel.com, 12 Apr. 2022 Before the skeptics and cancel-culture warriors object a wittle too loudly, though, keep in mind that EPPE early adopters will be able to build a new society and pillage the belongings of the dead. Zach Zimmerman, The New Yorker, 1 Mar. 2022 This should never be an excuse to rape and pillage our environment. Phillip Molnar, San Diego Union-Tribune, 26 Nov. 2021 Or showed up as a band of pirates, here to pillage and plunder. John Canzano, oregonlive, 31 Oct. 2021 Yes, the Beatles wanted to hold your hand, but the Stones wanted to pillage your village, make off with its women, and salt the earth on the way out of town. Chris Nashawaty, EW.com, 24 Aug. 2021 See More

Word History

Etymology

Noun

Middle English pilage, from Anglo-French, from piler to rob, plunder

First Known Use

Noun

14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Verb

circa 1593, in the meaning defined at transitive sense

Time Traveler
The first known use of pillage was in the 14th century
BNC: 19372 COCA: 21088

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