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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ravaged

Ravage \Rav"age\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Ravaged (r[a^]v"[asl]jd); p. pr. & vb. n. Ravaging (r[a^]v"[asl]*j[i^]ng).] [F. ravager. See Ravage, n.] To lay waste by force; to desolate by violence; to commit havoc or devastation upon; to spoil; to plunder; to consume.

Already C[ae]sar Has ravaged more than half the globe.
--Addison.

His lands were daily ravaged, his cattle driven away.
--Macaulay.

Syn: To despoil; pillage; plunder; sack; spoil; devastate; desolate; destroy; waste; ruin.

Wiktionary
ravaged

vb. (en-past of: ravage)

WordNet
ravaged
  1. adj. having been robbed and destroyed by force and violence; "the raped countryside" [syn: despoiled, pillaged, raped, sacked]

  2. made uninhabitable; "upon this blasted heath"- Shakespeare; "a wasted landscape" [syn: blasted, desolate, desolated, devastated, ruined, wasted]

Wikipedia
Ravaged

Ravaged is a multiplayer first-person shooter video game featuring vehicular combat. Developed by 2 Dawn Games, the game was partly funded through Kickstarter, raising $38,767 on the platform in May 2012.

Usage examples of "ravaged".

Ever since the rash but successful enterprise of the Franks under the reign of Probus, their daring countrymen had constructed squadrons of light brigantines, in which they incessantly ravaged the provinces adjacent to the ocean.

But the most important service which Probus rendered to the republic was the deliverance of Gaul, and the recovery of seventy flourishing cities oppressed by the barbarians of Germany, who, since the death of Aurelian, had ravaged that great province with impunity.

Hellespont and the Bosphorus, ravaged in their passage the shores of Troy, whose fame, immortalized by Homer, will probably survive the memory of the Gothic conquests.

His fleets rode triumphant in the channel, commanded the mouths of the Seine and of the Rhine, ravaged the coasts of the ocean, and diffused beyond the columns of Hercules the terror of his name.

Barbarians exercised their indiscriminate cruelty on the fortunes of the Romans and the Spaniards, and ravaged with equal fury the cities and the open country.

Whilst Italy was ravaged by the Goths, and a succession of feeble tyrants oppressed the provinces beyond the Alps, the British island separated itself from the body of the Roman empire.

Constantinople, he ravaged, without resistance, and without mercy, the provinces of Thrace and Macedonia.

The crafty Barbarian suggested to Vortigern the obvious advantage of fixing, in the neighborhood of the Picts, a colony of faithful allies: a third fleet of forty ships, under the command of his son and nephew, sailed from Germany, ravaged the Orkneys, and disembarked a new army on the coast of Northumberland, or Lothian, at the opposite extremity of the devoted land.

Barbarians who ravaged the inland country and the Turks and Arabs who advanced from the sea-coast in more formidable array.

The Tartars ravaged with equal fury the countries which they hoped to possess, and those which they were hastening to leave.

But at last Hastings, the famous Danish chief, having ravaged all the provinces of France, both along the sea-coast and the Loire and Seine, and being obliged to quit that country, more by the desolation which he himself had occasioned, than by the resistance of the inhabitants, appeared off the coast of Kent with a fleet of three hundred and thirty sail.

Southamptom, they ravaged the country, enriched themselves by spoil, and departed with impunity.

He ravaged the eastern coast with merciless fury, and put ashore all the English hostages at Sandwich, after having cut off their hands and noses.

The green-wood glade, the cultivated fields, noble castles, and smiling villages were changed to churchyard and tomb: want, famine and hate ravaged the fated land.

They had been traveling without rest for more than twenty hours now, and were it not for their determination to overcome those who had ravaged Feverroot, they would have dropped hours earlier.