How To Use Ransack In A Sentence

  • After posting a "sunny, bright, cozy loft" on the rental marketplace, the woman, who uses the pseudonym EJ, returned to find the apartment ransacked by a renter using the name "DJ Pattrson. ABC News: Top Stories
  • The team will ransack every word of testimony, memo and report for any inaccuracy, inconsistency or contradiction.
  • Meanwhile, more religions are ransacked for metaphor than Joseph Campbell ever shook his shtick at.
  • The gangs sold their booty, families tried to earn money from their belongings and neighbours ransacked the homes of anyone who had not returned from prison. Times, Sunday Times
  • York war veteran Joe Munday today spoke of his anger towards thieves who ransacked his house and stole his prized medals.
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  • The crooks prised out the kitchen window and ransacked the house. The Sun
  • They tied her to a chair in the nursery and then ransacked her house looking for cash and valuables. The Sun
  • He allegedly then ransacked the house, stole a gun from a safe, and fled in the homeowner's vehicle.
  • The rogues ransack the place in search of a treasure map, offing the men and carting the women, including feisty Violet Miranda, onto a ship run by the dastardly but suave Captain Calico Jack.
  • A landlord who was tied up and threatened at knifepoint while balaclava-clad raiders ransacked his Brentwood pub has told of his horrific ordeal.
  • I've ransacked the house for those papers, but I can't find them.
  • As a result, south-east Asia's biggest oil producer is ransacking its foreign exchange reserves to pay for imported oil and to shore up its currency.
  • Ransack your cupboards for Angostura Bitters, vermouth and lime juice, and prepare the tall glasses.
  • Thieves had ransacked class seven, stealing exercise books belonging to Year Five children age 10.
  • The robbers then ransacked the premises and stole £3,000 worth of cigarettes and a substantial amount of cash.
  • Ransacked: Ania Cerelczak outside the gallery in Great Guildford Street Bungling thief drops mobile during ram-raid at gallery Robbers smashed their van into a London art gallery in a ram-raid that caused thousands of pounds of damage. Evening Standard - Home
  • The burglars ransacked the house but found nothing valuable.
  • Burglars ransacked the house, taking £1,000 of jewellery, silver and china and the family heirlooms.
  • ‘When he went back into his home, he found that two rooms had been ransacked and the cash stolen,’ he said.
  • The thieves broke in by forcing a casement window in the dining room before ransacking the house.
  • And when it isn't someone like a friend saying, "That's a cool pic, can I borrow it" like if a pic of me showed up on another site about something - I woudld be okay about that - unless it was devo, that is one thing, when it is 300 guys in 6 hours ransacking the place, it feels a little different, more violation. Devotees and me (closing Screw Bronze); the cage of stereotype plus a suicide!
  • So I set to and ransacked the lockers, where, amongst a vast variety of miscellaneous matters, I was not long in finding a bottle of very tolerable rum, some salt junk, some biscuit, and a goglet or porous earthen jar of water, with some capital cigars. Tom Cringle's Log
  • They began to ransack Autobot Headquarters, inflicting major damage to Teletraan I. Wheeljack managed to subdue the Dinobots with his shoulder-mounted magnetic inducer. Matthew Yglesias » The Ontology of Transformers
  • While I sample a Heineken, an old genever or two and a portion of marinated herring, she is busy ransacking the airport shops for free samples.
  • Housing estates have been burnt down, schools ransacked, shops looted.
  • There has been lots of looting and lawlessness, with government buildings, hospitals, schools, libraries and museums ransacked.
  • The judge isn't going to ransack the prosecutor's file drawers and hand over to the defense copies of all the evidence the judge thinks is exculpatory.
  • They tied her to a chair in the nursery and then ransacked her house looking for cash and valuables. The Sun
  • He knocked on the door and, when the woman opened it, he pushed her inside and ransacked the house, escaping with her handbag, purse and glasses.
  • Now, he's slashing capital expenditures and ransacking his portfolio for bits and pieces to sell, all to bring down debt.
  • Twice burglars in my pay ransacked her house. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
  • The whole flat had been ransacked.
  • If you did nothing but pursue the main battle missions in Fallout 3 , the game would be much less melancholy, because all you'd encounter would be sardonic rejoinders, brutal attacks and corpses to ransack for bad-ass weapons, precisely like every other shoot'em-up in history. Bleak Fallout 3 Dazzles With Great Depression
  • I ransacked the house looking for my purse.
  • Then they would sleep, again awaking at day-dawn when they would arise and seek for spoil, according to their custom, and ransack the heaps where at times they would hit upon a silverling of five dirhams and at other times a piece of four; and at eventide they would meet to spend together the dark hours, and they would expend everything they came by every day. Arabian nights. English
  • Invaders from the south ransacked the town.
  • The economy, ransacked by successive leaders, now teetered on the brink of collapse. Times, Sunday Times
  • Soon bands of hungry insurgents were ransacking strongpoints in the city for arms, powder, and hoards of flour.
  • Answering the siren call of Egypt once more, Amelia Peabody and her family arrive at their home in Luxor to learn of a new royal tomb ransacked by thieves. The Golden One: Summary and book reviews of The Golden One by Elizabeth Peters.
  • He is forced to sign a ‘Permission for Search’ which allows Ford detectives to ransack his home.
  • One witness said a police station in the central town of Kaolack had been ransacked, while state radio said the local headquarters of Wade's liberal PDS had been burned down. Protests sweep through Senegal after Wade poll ruling
  • Because the Jets and Giants shouldn't be the only ones sitting at home getting fat this Sunday, we've ransacked the minds of some of NY's most esteemed chefs & barmen to bring you easy-to-make recipes packing flavors so explosive, you'll think Antonio Cromartie's tweeting about you. Thrillist: Super Bowl Super Snacking: Easy Grub for Game Day
  • He is forced to sign a ‘Permission for Search’ which allows Ford detectives to ransack his home, turn out all his poor possessions in hopes of finding a Ford incandescent lamp or a generator armature.
  • They smashed the windowpanes of the cinema, damaged the furniture and ransacked the canteen.
  • They ransacked the house searching for a gun for almost 12 hours but it was not found.
  • She ransacked the wardrobe for something to wear.
  • As a result, south-east Asia's biggest oil producer is ransacking its foreign exchange reserves to pay for imported oil and to shore up its currency.
  • However, it didn't seem like they were ransacking the place.
  • After ransacking his valise, they discover he is French.
  • Shortly afterwards her house was ransacked. Times, Sunday Times
  • They were ordered not to move or speak for an hour while the riot squad searched and often ransacked their rooms.
  • The owner of a mail order lingerie business which was ransacked by burglars has spoken of her disgust at the intruders.
  • Sadly, pathetically, while he was hospitalised his neat single storey home was broken into and ransacked in an obvious search for money.
  • But when the Americans launched a withering counterattack the defenders sustained heavy casualties and were forced to abandon the town, which was subsequently ransacked. Times, Sunday Times
  • Men toting guns were ransacking shops of whatever they could carry.
  • The rogues ransack the place in search of a treasure map, carting the women, including feisty Violet Miranda, onto a ship run by the dastardly but suave Captain Calico Jack.
  • I kept my keys in a'safe' place and as a result my home was ransacked. Times, Sunday Times
  • The reopening of the embassy building comes four years after a mob ransacked it in a protest over Western sanctions. Times, Sunday Times
  • They smashed the windowpanes of the cinema, damaged the furniture and ransacked the canteen.
  • Including Ethel's friend in the knit suit and imitation pearls, who'd probably been busy ransacking her bag for lipstick or pillbox. C B GREENFIELD - A LITTLE MADNESS
  • But to go on from this, as Dr Guest and some of his followers have done, to the subjection of the whole invaluable vocabulary of classical prosody to a sort of _præmunire_, to hold up the hands in horror at the very name of a tribrach, and exhibit symptoms of catalepsy at the word catalectic -- to ransack the dictionary for unnatural words or uses of words like "catch," and "stop," and The Flourishing of Romance and the Rise of Allegory (Periods of European Literature, vol. II)
  • Every room in their home was turned over and ransacked by the raiders in their search for valuables.
  • She ransacked her house hunting for the ticket, before remembering she still had the play slip. The Sun
  • When he demanded £5,000 to cover the costs of his journey south, Cecil and Buckhurst ransacked the accounts and found no credits whatsoever.
  • We stopped them ransacking more, and Joy told them we'd bought the buildings and their contents. WHITE LIES
  • Then he bound her hands and ransacked the house, stealing what is believed to be a few hundred pounds.
  • He was allowed home after one night, only to find his house had been ransacked in his absence. Times, Sunday Times
  • Young artists ransacked antique shops and archives to find spiritual nourishment beyond the groundwork that had been laid waste.
  • When police failed to catch the burglar who ransacked her dying mum's home, Georgina Artingstall decided she would solve the case herself.
  • I'm here ransacking my closet for something good enough to wear, I can't believe all the trash I've got in here!
  • I've ransacked the house for those papers, but I can't find them.
  • But that relief would have quickly turned to a different flavor of alarm when the victims realized that Under the pretext of a drug search, the five-man robbery crew ransacked the Locklear home in search of large amounts of cash that could be "forfeited" - that is, stolen - as alleged drug proceeds. LewRockwell.com
  • The gunmen realized that in order to look for the money, they would have to ransack the whole place and kill to get everyone of the way.
  • They then went on to ransack a hangar belonging to the property, which houses an aeroplane, helicopter and car.
  • From Isles of Greece / The princes orgulous, their high blood chafed, / Have. .. sent their ships. .. / To ransack Troy.
  • The whole flat had been ransacked.
  • A SHOCKED great gran died after suffering a heart attack when she found her home had been ransacked by burglars. The Sun
  • Today's conflict profiteers are not the first to sponsor a campaign to ransack, rape, pillage and plunder in the Congo.
  • Feeling that ordinary language is insufficient to convey his _courteous_ and _chivalrous_ sentiments, he ransacks natural history in search of a sublime metaphor: his triumphant success he records in this beautifully expressed sentence -- "The dilating power of the anaconda and the gizzard of the cassowary are the highest objects of his ambition. Lands of the Slave and the Free Cuba, the United States, and Canada
  • It's unusual for someone to strike like this during the day and to ransack the place in such a disturbing way.
  • Thieves ransacked the office, taking a sack of loose change.
  • If you did nothing but pursue the main battle missions in Fallout 3 , the game would be much less melancholy, because all you'd encounter would be sardonic rejoinders, brutal attacks and corpses to ransack for bad-ass weapons, precisely like every other shoot'em-up in history. Bleak Fallout 3 Dazzles With Great Depression
  • The subject firmly grips a ransacked, unfashioned garment secured by a simple-knotted line of inter-woven string.
  • The shops have been ransacked, their steel shutters ripped away. Times, Sunday Times
  • After he finished violating her, he then ransacked the room stealing 1,000 baht in cash and other items before leaving.
  • His Columbia University office was ransacked and he was subject to a seemingly endless litany of lies about his character.
  • A library had been ransacked and shops looted. Times, Sunday Times
  • I've ransacked the house for those papers, but I can't find them.
  • Attics were ransacked with uncustomary thoroughness.
  • He discovered the house had been ransacked and his car taken when he returned. The Sun
  • The Police ransacked the village, killed 20 persons in indiscriminate firing, and set fire to two busses.
  • The soldiers dismount and secure the area and with little warning, kick in the door, roust the residents out of the house, and search and ransack the home.
  • So he sole out an 'went to whah dey was re - cruitin', an 'hired hisse'f out to de Colonel for his servant; an' den he went all froo de battles everywhah, huntin 'for his ole mammy; yes in - deedy, he'd hire to fust one officer an' den an - other, tell he'd ransacked de whole Souf -- but you see I didn't know nuffin ''bout dis. A True Story, Repeated Word for Word as I Heard It
  • The shops have been ransacked, their steel shutters ripped away. Times, Sunday Times
  • Reuters filmed houses with their doors smashed in and ransacked by US troops as they searched for weapons.
  • As one held him down and demanded to know where he kept his money, the others ransacked his home, pulling out drawers and emptying cupboards. Times, Sunday Times
  • They ransacked the whole classroom for their basketball.
  • While we examined the formation, Furayj and old Sulaym, who became more and more "moony," ransacked the block in all directions, and notably failed to find a trace of mining. The Land of Midian — Volume 2
  • A total of 44 active boxes were ransacked. The Sun
  • After ransacking the vestry and attempting to tear a steel donation box from the wall the burglars left empty-handed.
  • They saw a bunch of thieves ransacking the place.
  • And while Mr Stevens's bride was keeping a round-the-clock at his hospital bedside, burglars ransacked their home.
  • His house in Berlin was ransacked by the Nazis. Einstein gave up his German citizenship in 1932 and became a naturalised American citizen in 1940.
  • The wine cellar's been ransacked, the telly's gone missing and the plants are withered and smelling of pee, but apart from that, it's more or less how I left it.
  • A few years earlier, when a Coast Guard cutter in hot pursuit of a Lake Erie rumrunner ran aground near Port Colborne, Ontario, it was looted and ransacked by a crowd of locals, its wiring cut, its cylinders filled with sand. LAST CALL
  • She ransacked her house hunting for the ticket, before remembering she still had the play slip. The Sun
  • Shops all over the city have been ransacked for boots, basques, garters, stockings and suspenders and other distinctly racy garments by theatre-goers determined to join in the spirit of the gender-bending theatrical phenomenon.
  • Europe was ransacked for copies of the long unused Latin classics and copyists multiplied them.
  • I've ransacked the house for those papers, but I can't find them.
  • The owner of a mail order lingerie business which was ransacked by burglars has spoken of her disgust at the intruders.
  • As one held him down and demanded to know where he kept his money, the others ransacked his home, pulling out drawers and emptying cupboards. Times, Sunday Times
  • He ransacked drawers and cupboards in her room, but it is not known if anything was stolen. The Sun
  • Yet the swine who broke into and ransacked her home had not a moment's concern for her age or her condition.
  • Immediately asking for money, he forces them into their mansion and ransacks the place.
  • The flat looks rather like it has been ransacked by disgruntled burglars.
  • When he recently tried to enrol at university in Kabul, he claims the security agencies ransacked his room. Times, Sunday Times
  • Centaur tribes terrorize the Barrens of Kalimdor and ransack the indigenous peoples' villages and cities.
  • What should have been a difficult test for Ayr turned into a romp as the hosts ransacked their guests.
  • I ransacked the cupboard for my ski boots.
  • He noted the house had been doused in petrol after it was ransacked.
  • His house in Berlin was ransacked by the Nazis. Einstein gave up his German citizenship in 1932 and became a naturalised American citizen in 1940.
  • The three friends were then locked in a bathroom while the gang ransacked the flat, stealing mobile phones and other items.
  • Dozens forced their way inside and ransacked the building. The Sun
  • The couple's holiday home was ransacked by locals. The Sun
  • The intruders grabbed 2,000 as they ransacked the house. The Sun
  • This shews some good will he has to the Comick Trade however; and I doubt not, but if his Closet were Ransack'd, we might find a divertive Essays on the Stage Preface to the Campaigners (1689) and Preface to the Translation of Bossuet's Maxims and Reflections on Plays (1699)
  • Shortly afterwards her house was ransacked. Times, Sunday Times
  • If you need flowers or a bouquet the next time, you don't need to ransack your cupboard to search for the misplaced telephone index or that huge telephone directory to search for a bouquet shop phone number.
  • My bed shall be abused, my coffers ransacked, my reputation gnawn at; and I shall not only receive this villanous wrong, but stand under the adoption of abominable terms, and by him that does me this wrong. The Merry Wives of Windsor
  • They forced their way in, demanded money and snatched a cordless phone from the man's hand before ransacking the house.
  • They ransacked the whole classroom for their basketball.
  • A writer who aims to be widely read to-day must perpetually halt, must perpetually hesitate at the words that arise in his mind; he must ask himself how many people will stick at this word altogether or miss the meaning it should carry; he must ransack his memory for a commonplace periphrase, an ingenious rearrangement of the familiar; he must omit or overaccentuate at every turn. Mankind in the Making
  • I have ransacked my thesaurus for a word that does justice to the terrible events that made up what history will know for ever as The Battle of Old Trafford, and I have come up with the mot juste.
  • They then went on to ransack a hangar belonging to the property, which houses an aeroplane, helicopter and car.
  • The thieving wine connoisseurs then ransacked the house, stealing laptops, wallets and jewellery.
  • So when heartless thieves ransacked and stole decorations from outside his Netley home he was devastated.
  • The thieves ransacked the living room but only stole a small amount of jewellery.
  • Structuralism, semiotics, and later, psychoanalysis were all ransacked for help in understanding how a film achieved its effects.
  • The unclad working class panorama would slam rusted doors on the Promised Land, ransacking determined belief from our official atheism. Soviet
  • The couple's holiday home was ransacked by locals. The Sun
  • They ransacked brick rubble lay strong strong and unyielding ( up ).
  • The young man reportedly ransacked the house, destroying everything within his reach.
  • Ransacking the Internet, I could discover no Perelman parties, no memorial readings from the canon, no revivals of the Broadway shows he worked on, no retrospectives of the films he helped write.
  • The raiders broke into the community centre where the toddler group meets and ransacked four rooms, helping themselves to drinks and chocolate that had been bought for the tots.
  • Double the radius, and you roughly octuple the number of stars to ransack. The Boat of a Million Years
  • At least three people were killed as demonstrators ransacked the national assembly and other government buildings. Times, Sunday Times
  • The economy, ransacked by successive leaders, now teetered on the brink of collapse. Times, Sunday Times
  • A SHOCKED great gran died after suffering a heart attack when she found her home had been ransacked by burglars. The Sun
  • He discovered the house had been ransacked and his car taken when he returned. The Sun
  • Thousands of demonstrators ransacked the embassy compound, tearing down the large US seal on the front of the chancellery building and setting fire to vehicles.
  • Shops were ransacked and traders were killed where they worked. Times, Sunday Times
  • Dozens forced their way inside and ransacked the building. The Sun
  • Earlier the court heard that police found the flat had been ransacked and there were bloodstained footprints in the hall.
  • Property of the targeted man was ransacked, and a police sergeant was hospitalised after being hit by astone. The Volokh Conspiracy » Murderers’ Right to “Privacy” vs. Freedom of Speech
  • I then ransacked the studio for a cardboard box that I could turn into a cigarette box and happily, my prayers were answered in the shape of an empty box of A4 paper.
  • So the crowds ransacked the house. The English Civil War: A People's History
  • I'm guessing he's in Sirius 'room at Grimmauld Place because the room looks like it's been ransacked. ‘Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows’ Gets A Second Image, This Time With Magic » MTV Movies Blog
  • Rich came running up behind me, his expression darkening as he took in the ransacked tent. The Children of the Lost
  • The attics will be ransacked, the old turntables and cassette decks will be dusted down.
  • There are a lot of funny stories about that guy, actually… He used to run his own scroggin the New Zealand term for a mixture of fruit and nuts business a while back, but the little factory he had at his house got ransacked by a flock of wild birds. Buzzine » Kids in Caves
  • Mr. Robinson claimed the house was ransacked with furniture either destroyed or stolen - among these goods, a TV, coffee table, hallstand and ornaments.
  • Scannadio was, and what strange reports had bene noised of him, not onely for ransacking dead mens graves in the night season, but many other abhominable Villanies committed by him, which so fearfully assaulted him; that his haire stoode on end, every member of him quaked, and every minute he imagined Scannadio rising, with intent to strangle him in the grave. The Decameron
  • Mobs assaulted any black person they saw on the street, ransacked and burned homes in African-American neighborhoods, and looted stores owned by blacks and “sympathetic” whites.
  • The burglars ransacked the house but found nothing valuable.
  • When he recently tried to enrol at university in Kabul, he claims the security agencies ransacked his room. Times, Sunday Times
  • The police spent an hour combing the residence, probing the floor and compound and ransacking the wardrobes.
  • The place was ransacked and the papers boxed up and stolen.
  • The crooks prised out the kitchen window and ransacked the house. The Sun
  • Mr. Robinson claimed the house was ransacked with furniture either destroyed or stolen - among these goods, a TV, coffee table, hallstand and ornaments.
  • He was already ransacking the still faintly-perfumed dining-room for matches, and had just succeeded in relighting the still-warm lamp, when he heard her quiet step in the porch, even felt her peering in, in the gloom, with all her years 'trickling customariness behind her, a little dubious of knocking on a wide-open door. The Return
  • In another instance, a family with young children was barricaded into a room while a gang ransacked the house.
  • Shops were ransacked and traders were killed where they worked. Times, Sunday Times
  • A library had been ransacked and shops looted. Times, Sunday Times
  • The soldiers dismount and secure the area and with little warning, kick in the door, roust the residents out of the house, and search and ransack the home.
  • He was allowed home after one night, only to find his house had been ransacked in his absence. Times, Sunday Times
  • They went through the couple's kitchen cupboards, tipping the contents onto the floor, and ransacked the sitting room.
  • The raiders broke into the community centre where the toddler group meets and ransacked four rooms, helping themselves to drinks and chocolate that had been bought for the tots.
  • Thieves ransacked the office, taking a sack of loose change.
  • And for the other part of memory, called reminiscence, which is the retrieving of a thing, at present forgot, or but confusedly remembered, by setting the mind to hunt over all its notions, and to ransack every little cell of the brain. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. I.
  • She was for ever running to ransack her crowded dresser drawers, rummaging in her sewing box as she made high-pitched excited noises.
  • The intruders grabbed 2,000 as they ransacked the house. The Sun
  • He begins to ransack the apartment, searching through drawers and cabinets.
  • Police are urging motorists to wipe personal details from the gadgets or risk having their homes ransacked. Times, Sunday Times
  • The woman ransacked the house for her lost jewelry.
  • They ransacked two government offices, stealing furniture and torching it at a traffic intersection.
  • He claimed the proceedings were a sequel to the 1991 raid in which his home had also been ransacked but which had been illegal as an invalid warrant had been used.
  • Police are urging motorists to wipe personal details from the gadgets or risk having their homes ransacked. Times, Sunday Times
  • Four months later, on the night of her 83rd birthday, burglars ransacked her bedroom as she slept heavily after taking a sleeping tablet.
  • The thieves broke in by forcing a casement window in the dining room before ransacking the house.
  • After ransacking his valise, they discover he is French.
  • I kept my keys in a'safe' place and as a result my home was ransacked. Times, Sunday Times
  • A total of 44 active boxes were ransacked. The Sun
  • The defence claimed her aunt was viciously beaten by a burglar who ransacked the house.
  • The gangs sold their booty, families tried to earn money from their belongings and neighbours ransacked the homes of anyone who had not returned from prison. Times, Sunday Times
  • But to go on from this, as Dr Guest and some of his followers have done, to the subjection of the whole invaluable vocabulary of classical prosody to a sort of _præmunire_, to hold up the hands in horror at the very name of a tribrach, and exhibit symptoms of catalepsy at the word catalectic -- to ransack the dictionary for unnatural words or uses of words like "catch," and "stop," and The Flourishing of Romance and the Rise of Allegory (Periods of European Literature, vol. II)
  • Police would come and search private houses of the members and ransack the whole lot.
  • He says he has lost friends, had his house ransacked, had his taxes audited and been publicly vilified for his outspokenness.
  • Twice burglars in my pay ransacked her house. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
  • So the crowds ransacked the house. The English Civil War: A People's History
  • His house in Berlin was ransacked by the Nazis . Einstein gave up his German citizenship in 1932became a naturalised American citizen in 1940.

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