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  1. Dictionary
    ransack
    /ˈransak/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to search a place or container in a violent and careless way: The burglars ransacked the house but found nothing valuable. I ransacked the cupboard for my ski boots. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to search for something. search I've searched everywhere and can't find my passport. look She was looking in her handbag for a pen.

  3. : to search through and steal from in a forceful and damaging way : plunder. Thieves ransacked the house. Louis XVI was persuaded to risk a navy far from its own shores and to ransack the French arsenals for arms and ammunition … C. P. Reynolds. ransacker noun. Did you know?

  4. Ransack definition: to search thoroughly or vigorously through (a house, receptacle, etc.). See examples of RANSACK used in a sentence.

  5. When you ransack, you rifle through things, steal some of them, and leave a huge mess behind. If neighborhood dogs got into a cupcake shop, they would probably ransack it.

  6. ran·sack. 1. To search through (something) thoroughly and often roughly: ransacked the drawer looking for my keys. 2. To go through (a place) stealing valuables and causing disarray; pillage: ransacked the village.

  7. to search a place or container in a violent and careless way: The burglars ransacked the house but found nothing valuable. I ransacked the closet for my ski boots. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to search for something. search I've searched everywhere and can't find my passport.

  8. If people ransack a building, they damage things in it or make it very untidy, often because they are looking for something in a quick and careless way. Demonstrators ransacked and burned the house where he was staying.

  9. ransack something to make a place untidy, causing damage, because you are looking for something synonym turn upside down. Burglars ransacked her home. The house had been ransacked by burglars. The palace was ransacked by rioters in 1848. Word Origin. Questions about grammar and vocabulary?

  10. To make a vigorous and thorough search of (a place, person) with a view to stealing something, especially when leaving behind a state of disarray. To ransack a house for valuables. Wiktionary. (archaic) To examine carefully; to investigate. Wiktionary. More Verb Definitions (1) Synonyms: foray. rifle. loot. pillage. plunder. strip. despoil. reave.

  11. If people ransack a building, they damage things in it or make it very messy, often because they are looking for something in a quick and careless way. [...]