plunder

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To pillage, take or destroy all the goods of, by force (as in war); to raid, sack.
  2. To take (goods) by pillage.
  3. To take by force or wrongfully; to commit robbery or looting, to raid.
  4. To make extensive (over)use of, as if by plundering; to use or use up wrongfully.
  5. To take unexpectedly.
noun
  1. An instance of plundering.
  2. The loot attained by plundering.
  3. Baggage; luggage.
  4. The crime of amassing ill-gotten wealth by public officials through a combination or series of overt criminal acts.

Pronunciation

/ˈplʌndə/ plŭn'də /ˈplʌndɚ/ /ˈplɜn-/ En-us-plunder-1.wav En-us-plunder.ogg

Word forms

plunder plunders plundering plundered

Etymology

Recorded since 1632 during the Thirty Years War, native British use since the Cromwellian Civil War. Borrowed from German plündern (“to loot”), from Middle High German, from Middle Low German plunderen, from a noun originally meaning "household goods, bedding, clothing," of obscure ultimate origin. This is first attested in medieval records, and according to Gijsseling, is therefore attested too late to be considered a substrate word. Due to the lack of obvious cognates in other languages from which it would have been loaned, it could have developed as some slang word in Lower Saxony/the Low Countries. Cognate with Dutch plunderen, West Frisian plonderje, Saterland Frisian plunnerje. Probably denominal from a word for “household goods, clothes, bedding”; compare Middle Dutch plunder, German Plunder (“stuff”), Dutch and West Frisian plunje (“clothes”). The Philippine definition originates with the Anti-Plunder Act, an act of Congress enacted in 1991.

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