To steal the goods of an opponent by force, especially in time of war.
The town has been pillaged by Vikings.Sir, the Vikings have pillaged us again.I told you we'd get pillaged all the time if we built the town too close to the coast.
they raped and pillaged, raped and pillaged, raped and pillaged, all day long they slaughtered kids, burned the village, killed the spillage, that was wrong
Murdered and pillaged
Pillaged, or plundered.
Hernan Cortes and his Spanish conquistadores.
the golden hind a "pirate" ship and with it he pillaged Spanish ships
He often pillaged captured cities. He was known to kill prisoners.
They robbed stole plundered and pillaged. They were outlaws after all.
verb verb: pillage; 3rd person present: pillages; past tense: pillaged; past participle: pillaged; gerund or present participle: pillaging1. rob (a place) using violence, especially in wartime.steal (something) using violence, especially in wartime. "artworks pillaged from churches and museums"synonyms: ransack, rob, plunder, despoil, raid, loot; More sack, devastate, lay waste, ravage, rape"the abbey was pillaged"steal, pilfer, thieve, take, snatch, purloin, loot;informalswipe, rob, nab, rip off, lift, "liberate", "borrow", filch, snaffle, pinch, heist"columns pillaged from an ancient town"nounnoun: pillage1.the action of pillaging a place or property, especially in wartime.
Pirates plundered and pillaged their way up and down this coast for many years.
no, wild antmos came and raped and pillaged her village.
Because they plundered and pillaged and stole countrues mony by hijacking their boats