voracious applies especially to habitual gorging with food or drink.
teenagers are often voracious eaters
gluttonous applies to one who delights in eating or acquiring things especially beyond the point of necessity or satiety.
an admiral who was gluttonous for glory
ravenous implies excessive hunger and suggests violent or grasping methods of dealing with food or with whatever satisfies an appetite.
a nation with a ravenous lust for territorial expansion
rapacious often suggests excessive and utterly selfish acquisitiveness or avarice.
rapacious developers indifferent to environmental concerns
Examples of rapacious in a Sentence
nothing livens things up like a whole team of rapacious basketball players descending upon the pizza parlor rapacious mammals, such as coyotes, foxes, and bobcats
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Russia is cast as the anti-environmental destroyer, hell-bent on rapacious domination both of Ukraine and of the natural world.—David Vetter, Forbes, 30 Dec. 2024 The rapacious killers can wipe out an entire bee colony within hours.—Shi En Kim, Smithsonian Magazine, 20 Dec. 2024 But this particular fight was not actually about putting the interests of patients against those of rapacious corporations.—Eric Levitz, Vox, 7 Dec. 2018 The archetypal Russia is a malign autocracy, the archetypal United States a rapacious hegemon.—Michael Kimmage, Foreign Affairs, 25 Jan. 2024 See all Example Sentences for rapacious
Word History
Etymology
Latin rapāc-, rapāx "given to seizing or catching things (as prey), carrying away, excessively grasping" (from rapere "to seize and carry off" + -āc-, -āx, deverbal suffix denoting habitual or successful performance) + -ious — more at rapid entry 1, audacious
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