Pillager

Synonyms for "pillager" (14 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Closest matches (3)

Strong matches (4)

Related words (7)

Related word relations

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

5 relation types

More general

2 entries

Synonyms

1 entries

derived from

1 entries

related to

1 entries

similar

1 entries

Translations

17 translations across 11 languages.

Powered by Wiktionary

Czech

1 entries
  • plenitel noun (one who pillages)

French

1 entries
  • pilleur noun (one who pillages)

Irish

2 entries
  • sladaire noun (one who pillages)
  • sladaí noun (one who pillages)

Italian

3 entries
  • predone noun (one who pillages)
  • saccheggiatore noun (one who pillages)
  • sciacallo noun (one who pillages)

Latin

1 entries
  • praedātor noun (one who pillages)

Māori

2 entries
  • kaipāhua noun (one who pillages)
  • kaipāhuahua noun (one who pillages)

Ottoman Turkish

2 entries
  • پلاچقهجی noun (one who pillages)
  • چاپولجی noun (one who pillages)

Portuguese

1 entries
  • pilhador noun (one who pillages)

Russian

2 entries
  • мародёр noun (one who pillages)
  • погро́мщик noun (one who pillages)

Slovak

1 entries
  • plieniteľ noun (one who pillages)

Spanish

1 entries
  • saqueador noun (one who pillages)

Sample sentences

4 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

She was silent, and he went on with increasing vehemence: “I am still that Edgar Ravenswood who, for your affection, renounced the dear ties by which injured honour bound him to seek vengeance. I am that Ravenswood who, for your sake, forgave, nay, clasped hands in friendship with, the oppressor and pillager of his house, the traducer and murderer of his father.”

Source: tatoeba (7760772)

...the hills of the robbers, predatorious oppreſſors of true Religion, pillagers and ſpoilers of the Church of Chriſt, of which too many ſad inſtances have been in ancient and later daies both at home and abroad.

Source: wiktionary

Wall labels, if you read them, will prepare you for the shift from the conventional picture of the terrible Turk, the ravisher, the torturer, the pillager (see T. E. Lawrence) and the Turk of the massacres (see Delacroix and others).

Source: wiktionary

And then there were those who died and were martyred in the struggle to maintain a Jewish lifestyle, murdered at the hands of deathmongers, pillagers […]

Source: wiktionary

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