Definitions
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Etymologies
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Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Looters.
Examples
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'Looters' fought over goods 'stolen' from collapsed stores.
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'Looters' fought over goods 'stolen' from collapsed stores.
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Naive Paul Krugman Calls Goldman Execs "Looters" column today is worth reading, but the headline - which, in fairness, was probably written by some editor - is hopelessly naive:
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Naive Paul Krugman Calls Goldman Execs "Looters" column today is worth reading, but the headline - which, in fairness, was probably written by some editor - is hopelessly naive:
-
Naive Paul Krugman Calls Goldman Execs "Looters" column today is worth reading, but the headline - which, in fairness, was probably written by some editor - is hopelessly naive:
-
Naive Paul Krugman Calls Goldman Execs "Looters" column today is worth reading, but the headline - which, in fairness, was probably written by some editor - is hopelessly naive:
-
Naive Paul Krugman Calls Goldman Execs "Looters" column today is worth reading, but the headline - which, in fairness, was probably written by some editor - is hopelessly naive:
-
Naive Paul Krugman Calls Goldman Execs "Looters" column today is worth reading, but the headline - which, in fairness, was probably written by some editor - is hopelessly naive:
-
Naive Paul Krugman Calls Goldman Execs "Looters" column today is worth reading, but the headline - which, in fairness, was probably written by some editor - is hopelessly naive:
-
Naive Paul Krugman Calls Goldman Execs "Looters" column today is worth reading, but the headline - which, in fairness, was probably written by some editor - is hopelessly naive:
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