例句 |
lootnoun valuables stolen or taken by forcethe burglar was caught when he foolishly stopped to examine the loot from the robbery booty, pillage, plunder, spoil, swag prizecatch, haul, take, treasurepilferagewindfall something (as pieces of stamped metal or printed paper) customarily and legally used as a medium of exchange, a measure of value, or a means of paymenta top-ranked golfer earning plenty of loot bread(slang), bucks, cabbage(slang), cash, change, chips, coin, currency, dough, gold, green, jack(slang), kale(slang), legal tender, lolly(British), long green(slang), lucre, money, moola(or moolah, slang), needful, pelf, scratch(slang), shekels(also sheqels or shekelim or shekalim or sheqalim), tender, wampum coinage, speciedead presidents(slang), folding money, paper money, scripbanknote, cashier's check, check, draft, money order, note, promissory notebill, dollar, greenbackbankroll, capital, finances, funds, roll(slang), wad, walletchump change, dibs(slang), dime, mite, peanuts, pittance, shoestringbig bucks, bomb(British), boodle, bundle, earth, fortune, king's ransom, megabucks, mint, packet(chiefly British), pile, potabundance, means, opulence, riches, treasure, wealthresources, wherewithalmad money, petty cash, pin money, pocket money, spending money lootverbto search through with the intent of committing robberythe bandits looted the archaeological dig before riding off into the night despoil, maraud, pillage, plunder, ransack, sack break in, burglarize, rip off, steal (from)comb, hunt, rake, rifle, rummageharry, raidravish n.spoil, plunder, booty, prize, loot mean something taken from another by force or craft.spoil, more commonly spoils, applies to what belongs by right or custom to the victor in war or political contest.the spoils of political victory plunder applies to what is taken not only in war but in robbery, banditry, grafting, or swindling.a bootlegger's plunder booty implies plunder to be shared among confederates.thieves dividing up their booty prize applies to spoils captured on the high seas or territorial waters of the enemy.the wartime right of seizing prizes at sea loot applies especially to what is taken from victims of a catastrophe.picked through the ruins for loot ca. 1788 |