Ravage in a sentence as a noun

This is going to ravage blog links on search engines.

If there's a forest to ravage, or an ocean to destroy, we will do it, and we'll do it well.

The sky has steadfastly refused to fall, and the four horsemen have failed to ravage the countryside.> 5.

Perhaps ruin, destroy, wreck, ravage, desolate, demolish, raze, etc.

They went from war ravage rural wasteland to the most envious economy in about 20 years.

Never before has a piece of software made me wish for a hurricane to ravage my country simply out of curiosity.

Clearly we should all buy the $4 clearcut, ravaged forest wood because that manufacturer has less money to damage the environment with?

Atheists don't tend to burn down other buildings because they are different, or ravage an entire community because they aren't secular.

Ravage in a sentence as a verb

Let's say if Apple took the reigns off background in iOS, we'd see some app developers ravage the battery and see users having terrible device experience.

To accept death as "natural" makes as much sense as accepting polio as natural and just allowing the disease to ravage the body instead of applying medicine.

*** has shown me a power to ravage the human psyche in ways that I haven't seen in mushrooms or ***, and therefore I consider it to have the potential to be somewhat more dangerous.

Seems like we generally feel alright ravaging Earth's existing species, so why isn't it ok for some hypothetically superior intelligence to ravage us?

Frequent catastrophes, such as deadly and widespread plagues and illness, caused by genetically modified crops and mutant pests, ravage entire populations.

They ravage the forest, leaving the land barren and unusable, before moving on to the next forest.$6 for the same sized piece of wood from a forest where the company harvesting the wood replants trees, thereby increasing costs.

When urban cities were getting crowded and a fire could ravage almost all of London, people were often more terrified of waking up to a fire consuming their very combustible homes than of being robbed in the middle of the night.

"Perhaps the lesson here is that competing with and using your 'friends' in serial fashion until you totally and completely ravage each relationship is key to achieving financial successbut then it's certainly no way to define friendship.

Ravage definitions

noun

(usually plural) a destructive action; "the ravages of time"; "the depredations of age and disease"

See also: depredation

verb

make a pillaging or destructive raid on (a place), as in wartimes

See also: harry

verb

cause extensive destruction or ruin utterly; "The enemy lay waste to the countryside after the invasion"

See also: waste devastate desolate scourge