LOOT! People u don't know this!
There is no such word in English. Perhaps you mean plunder, which means to steal goods. During the riot, people will plunder stores and homes.
During a riot, stores are often looted and vandalized by rioters seeking to steal goods or cause damage. Windows may be broken, items may be stolen, and the store's interior may be ransacked. Businesses may also be set on fire in extreme cases.
Looting
loot [loot] noun1. military spoils of war or riot: money or goods that have been pillaged during wartime or a riot 2. crime stolen goods: money or goods that have been stolen or obtained illegally 3. Same as money (sense 1)(informal) 4. lot of presents or purchases: a large amount of goods that have been bought or given on one occasion (informal) transitive and intransitive verb(past and past participle loot·ed, present participle loot·ing, 3rd person present singularloots)steal loot from place: to steal valuables from a place during a time of disorder or confusion, e.g. during wartime or a riot [Mid-19th century. < Hindi lūṭ]-loot·er, nounsource: Microsoft® Encarta® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Depends what goods they steal.
A looter will steal things when societal trouble breaks out and there is a riot and they will take things live TVs from shops.
To steal the goods of an opponent by force, especially in time of war.
"Plundereth" is an archaic form of the verb "plunder," which means to steal goods, typically during a time of war or conflict. It is an old-fashioned way of saying "plunders" or "steals."
Steal cheese and wine and eat them romantically under the rifle tower or near the louvre. Or riot because there are no jobs.
The past participle, past tense of the verb 'to steal' is also an adjective: stolenExample sentence:The stolen goods were recovered by the police.
(1)Lack of educational and facilities. (2)High prices of consumer goods and shortages
Vikings steal girls, goods, and polluted towns.