Saquear in english
To sack
pronunciation: tusæk part of speech: none
pronunciation: tusæk part of speech: none
In gestures
saquear = pillage ; plunder ; loot ; despoil ; rifle ; buccaneer ; ransack ; sack.
Example: And when, finally, the heavily timbered ranges had been pillaged almost beyond repair, many lumbermen pulled stakes and pushed westward.Example: Close on such paradeground excitements comes the popular sport of plundering for projects.Example: During the invasion of Kuwait the majority of school, public, university and special libraries were looted or destroyed = During the invasion of Kuwait the majority of school, public, university and special libraries were looted or destroyed.Example: The main justifications, couched mostly in race-neutral terms, were that the squatters would increase crime, decrease property values, spread disease, & despoil the natural environment.Example: English, on the other hand, has been accused of waylaying other languages in dark alleys and rifling their pockets for loose vocabulary.Example: But both he and his brother Maurice had supported themselves for some years by buccaneering in the Caribbean Sea.Example: The two polling stations of the town were ransacked by people who drove electoral officials and prevented the vote.Example: The survivors fled in horror while the children and young women were seized as slaves and the village sacked.