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  1. Dictionary
    marauder
    /məˈrɔːdə/

    noun

    • 1. a person who marauds; a raider: "a band of English marauders were surprised and overcome"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of MARAUDER is one who roams from place to place making attacks and raids in search of plunder : one that marauds. How to use marauder in a sentence.

  3. MARAUDER definition: 1. a person or animal that goes from one place to another looking for people to kill or things to…. Learn more.

  4. Marauder definition: someone who travels around plundering or pillaging. See examples of MARAUDER used in a sentence.

  5. A marauder is someone who roams around looking for things to steal. You might hear news reports about a marauder breaking into cars in your neighborhood. The word marauder entered English in the 17th century, from the Middle French word maraud, meaning "rascal."

  6. Definition of marauder noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. Define marauder. marauder synonyms, marauder pronunciation, marauder translation, English dictionary definition of marauder. v. ma·raud·ed , ma·raud·ing , ma·rauds v. intr. To rove and raid in search of plunder. v. tr. To raid or pillage for spoils. ma·raud′er n. American...

  8. Marauder definition: Someone who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder.

  9. If you describe a group of people or animals as marauders, you mean they are unpleasant and dangerous, because they wander around looking for opportunities to steal or kill.

  10. What does the noun marauder mean? There are two meanings listed in OED's entry for the noun marauder . See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

  11. v.t. to raid for plunder (often used passively): At the war's end the country had been marauded by returning bands of soldiers. n. [ Archaic.]the act of marauding. French marauder, derivative of maraud rogue, vagabond, Middle French, perh. identical with dialect, dialectal maraud tomcat, of expressive origin, originally. 1705–15. ma•raud′er, n.