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Looting   /lˈutɪŋ/   Listen
Looting

noun
1.
Plundering during riots or in wartime.  Synonym: robbery.



Loot

verb
(past & past part. looted; pres. part. looting)
1.
Take illegally; of intellectual property.  Synonym: plunder.
2.
Steal goods; take as spoils.  Synonyms: despoil, foray, pillage, plunder, ransack, reave, rifle, strip.



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"Looting" Quotes from Famous Books



... position which seemed to invite an attack. During the first two days of their possession of the city they were enjoying the fruits of their occupation in their own turbulent manner. Roberts' spies reported them busily engaged in sacking the Hindoo and Kuzzilbash quarters, in looting and wrecking the houses of chiefs and townsfolk who had shown friendliness to the British, and in quarrelling among themselves over the spoils. Requisitioning was in full force. The old Moulla Mushk-i-Alum was the temporary successor of General Hills in the office ...
— The Afghan Wars 1839-42 and 1878-80 • Archibald Forbes

... clearer. What I saw at close range General Pope himself saw at long range. He and his staff and a detachment came near enough to see the looting and burning of all our stores—I don't suppose so many were ever gathered together before. But I was right there. You ought to have seen the sight, Colonel, when those ragged rebels who had been living on green corn ...
— The Sword of Antietam • Joseph A. Altsheler

... hamlets of stucco and tile seemed to deny the reports of savagery we had heard the night before. We had been told, and we had read, of German atrocities, and we had talked with survivors of Louvain. There was pillage, burning, and looting in Louvain, we had agreed, but the cruelty to women and children was the better part myth. And at all events, there was a semblance of cause for that. Perhaps there had been more resistance, more sniping by citizens ...
— The Log of a Noncombatant • Horace Green

... warehouses. No heed was paid to the order, and soon tongues of lurid flame were leaping from building to building, until the conflagration was beyond all control. Men and women were like frenzied demons in their efforts to save property; there was terrific looting. Wagons and carts were hastily loaded with goods; some carried their things in wheel-barrows, some in their arms. Women tugged at barrels of flour, and children vainly tried to move boxes of tobacco. The sidewalks ...
— Ten American Girls From History • Kate Dickinson Sweetser

... into the game which is the common property of childhood. For a time, bloody captures, savage orgies, escape, pursuit, looting of great ships and burial of treasure, transformed the quiet shore to a theater of high crime. At last, as the August noon waxed high, and the hostage princess fell fast asleep in her perambulator cave, the cannibal, who had shifted to captured duke, ...
— Lydia of the Pines • Honore Willsie Morrow


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