[
US
/mɝˈɔd/
]
NOUN
- a sudden short attack
VERB
-
raid and rove in search of booty
marauding rebels overran the countryside
How To Use maraud In A Sentence
- In its favour, there is some genuine tension in the car chase sequences, and the marauding gangs of children seem not only authentic but realistically threatening.
- Ships of our navy have had occasional run-ins with pirates and marauders, but war for us is like the vaguest memory.
- Throughout his 13-year career, Taylor was a marauding, intimidating presence who helped transform the Giants from also-rans into champions.
- This marauding gang moved through the streets stabbing people at random.
- But the more evident marauder is pigeons, thanks to the sandwich crusts left by lunchers and the feed spread by misguided bird fanciers.
- I worried also about the nature of our neighborhood, which is a redneck Shangri-La of big dawgs, trucks with bad mufflers, heavily armed Gomers, and gangs of marauding feral boys with BB guns.
- The fort was built in 1793 under John Simcoe and was Toronto's main defence against an army of mindless marauders in 1812.
- According to the pirate legend, after months at sea, pillaging and singing sea chanties, the marauders had to stop in at a pirate-friendly settlement to unload their looted cargo, load up on supplies, and visit the local taverns and brothels. Loaded Guns, Barrels of Rum, and a Silk Ribbon
- Should Dani Alves and Eric Abidal maraud forward the Argentinian would utilise the space down the sides. Champions League 2011-12: A dream team to beat Barcelona | David Pleat
- Seldom has a central banker looked more secure in his war against marauding politicians.