Marauder

//məˈɹɔdɚ//

Synonyms for "marauder" (28 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

4 relation types

More general

4 entries

derived from

1 entries

is a

1 entries

related to

1 entries

Translations

38 translations across 24 languages.

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Belarusian

2 entries
  • марадзёр noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • марадзёрка noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Bulgarian

2 entries
  • мароде́р noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • мароде́рка noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Catalan

1 entries
  • basquejador noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Chinese Mandarin

1 entries
  • 掠奪者 /掠夺者 noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Czech

1 entries
  • nájezdník noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Dutch

1 entries
  • vagebond noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Finnish

3 entries
  • rosvo noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • rosvo noun (one who or that which marauds)
  • ryöstelijä noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

French

2 entries
  • maraudeur noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • maraudeuse noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

German

2 entries
  • Marodeur noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • Marodeurin noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Irish

1 entries
  • creachadóir noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Italian

1 entries
  • predone noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Japanese

1 entries
  • 略奪者 noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Korean

2 entries
  • 략탈자 noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • 약탈자 noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Latvian

1 entries
  • marodieris noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Macedonian

2 entries
  • ма́родер noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • пља́чкаш noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Neapolitan

1 entries
  • mariuolo noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Ottoman Turkish

2 entries
  • پلاچقهجی noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • چاپولجی noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Polish

2 entries
  • maruder noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • maruderka noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Portuguese

2 entries
  • predador noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • salteador noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Russian

2 entries
  • мародёр noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • мародёрка noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Spanish

1 entries
  • merodeador noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Swedish

1 entries
  • marodör noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Ukrainian

2 entries
  • мароде́р noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • мароде́рка noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Welsh

2 entries
  • herwr noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)
  • herwyr noun (one who moves about in roving fashion looking for plunder)

Sample sentences

2 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

Hunger, however, was ever on hand; then he had to become a marauder; dig some potatoes, and cook them in a corner of a wood, or pilfer the orchards.

Source: tatoeba (12095574)

a band of marauders

Source: wiktionary

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.