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  1. The meaning of RAVAGE is an act or practice of ravaging. How to use ravage in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Ravage.

  2. to work havoc upon; damage or mar by ruinous or destructive action: a face ravaged by grief. Synonyms: sack, pillage, plunder, despoil, ruin. Antonyms: repair, build.

  3. to cause great damage to something or someone: Hurricane Mitch ravaged the tiny Central American country. ravages. plural noun us / ˈræv·ɪ·dʒɪz / They survived the ravages of disease and malnutrition. (Definition of ravage from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

  4. Synonyms for RAVAGE: destroy, devastate, ruin, plunder, scourge, overwhelm, wreck, despoil; Antonyms of RAVAGE: recover, restore, rehabilitate, redeem, repair, recondition, patch, fix.

  5. The word ravage can be used as a noun or a verb meaning destruction or to destroy. In a war, bombs and the attacking army will ravage the country under siege. When ravage is used as a noun, you usually see it in the plural. Beware of the ravages of drugs on your body and your life.

  6. verb [usually passive] A town, country, or economy that has been ravaged is one that has been damaged so much that it is almost completely destroyed. For two decades the country has been ravaged by civil war and foreign intervention. [be VERB -ed] The camerawork makes the ravaged streets of New Orleans look exquisite.

  7. Check pronunciation: ravage. Definition of ravage verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. Depredation or devastation. The ravage of a lion; the ravages of fire or tempest; the ravages of an army, or of time. Wiktionary. Synonyms:

  9. Jun 2, 2024 · ravage (third-person singular simple present ravages, present participle ravaging, simple past and past participle ravaged) To devastate, destroy or lay waste to something.

  10. 1. The act or practice of pillaging or destroying: the marauders' ravage of the village. 2. a. Destruction, damage, or harm: The storm resulted in the ravage of the countryside. b. ravages Destructive or harmful effects: the ravages of disease. [French ravager, from Old French, to uproot, from ravir, to ravish; see ravish .] rav′ag·er n.

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