How to Use ravage in a Sentence

ravage

1 of 2 noun
  • It's been to the beach and withstood the ravages of sand.
    Florence Kane, Glamour, 5 Sep. 2017
  • And there will be a future, however great the ravages of the virus.
    Daniel K. Gardner, The New Republic, 9 Apr. 2020
  • Nothing can fully protect you from the ravages of a flood, of course.
    Tim Woodward, idahostatesman, 19 May 2017
  • Luck is not the first player, or even the first star, to retire early because of the NFL's ravages.
    Adam Kilgore, courant.com, 26 Aug. 2019
  • This movie imagines an African nation not damaged by the ravages of the slave trade.
    Jerry Large, The Seattle Times, 18 Feb. 2018
  • Now the archdiocese is seeking help to save Notre Dame from yielding to the ravages of time.
    Vivienne Walt / Paris, Time, 27 July 2017
  • The area in west Houston paid tribute to the survivors and those who are fighting the ravages of breast cancer.
    Staff Report, Houston Chronicle, 23 Oct. 2017
  • All Jim Tonelli has to do to see the ravages of emerald ash borer is walk out his back door.
    Lee Bergquist, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 25 June 2018
  • School nurse Heather Hays watched fentanyl’s ravages on the nightly news and grew worried.
    Maggie Prosser, Dallas News, 14 Sep. 2023
  • In one, set in 1985, a gallery director witnesses the ravages of AIDS all around him.
    Time Staff, Time, 22 May 2018
  • It’s festive and messy, an image, perhaps, of a certain kind of recovery from the ravages of the past.
    Cate McQuaid, BostonGlobe.com, 23 May 2018
  • My father-in-law suffers from Alzheimer’s and we’ve seen firsthand the ravages this illness can cause.
    Joshua Stewart, sandiegouniontribune.com, 1 Aug. 2017
  • By 2005, news of meth’s ravages were on display in the national media.
    Joshua Sharpe, ajc, 4 July 2018
  • At the same time, the continent has become a dramatic stage for the ravages of climate change.
    Matt Simon, Wired, 15 Jan. 2020
  • Young activists, who will be forced to live with the ravages of climate change, find this upsetting.
    David Roberts, Vox, 21 Dec. 2018
  • Fiberglass is made to stand up to the ravages of summer sun and salt water, so a little snow should be a problem, right?
    Popmech Editors, Popular Mechanics, 21 Nov. 2019
  • But the ravages of climate change have hit the animals, which depend on sea ice to survive, hard.
    Palko Karasz, BostonGlobe.com, 19 June 2019
  • The ravages of the opioid epidemic may be having an effect as well.
    Justin Lahart, WSJ, 8 May 2018
  • In 1944 researchers recognized that millions of people were at risk of famine as a result of the ravages of World War II.
    Andrea Gawrylewski, Scientific American, 18 July 2019
  • The ravages of the Dust Bowl were controlled within a few years, but the effects of climate change would be much more difficult to reverse.
    David Z. Morris, Fortune, 9 July 2017
  • As my bookseller friend knew, its ravages often leave the remaining copies of a work all the more valuable.
    Kevin Young, The New Yorker, 2 Dec. 2019
  • Today those same buildings, rescued from the ravages of war and time, are in active daily use.
    Scott Peterson, The Christian Science Monitor, 12 Oct. 2017
  • Apparently, Lenny Kravitz is immune to the ravages of time.
    Calin Van Paris, Vogue, 10 Oct. 2018
  • The play is set in a New York still reeling from the ravages of 9/11, which family members barely escaped.
    Julia M. Klein, Philly.com, 25 Jan. 2018
  • Progress in medicine has destroyed that era’s worst health ravages, and changes keep coming, extending life spans.
    Ken Fisher, USA TODAY, 1 Apr. 2018
  • Pest controllers Wallace and Gromit must save the day when a vegetable-munching beast ravages town gardens.
    Los Angeles Times, 13 Sep. 2019
  • These stylized works of art show the ravages of baking summers and bitter winters.
    National Geographic, 17 June 2019
  • The rock ’n’ roll ravages have done their thing, but those fabulous cheekbones — and that stare — remain intact.
    Mark Feeney, BostonGlobe.com, 11 July 2019
  • But the ravages of time lend him a dash of character-actor underdog appeal to go with the star power.
    Noah Berlatsky, CNN, 7 Apr. 2023
  • These elephants, in turn, ravage crops and antagonize villagers — a dynamic, Hogg explained, that’s at the heart of human-wildlife conflict.
    Tayari Jones, Travel + Leisure, 26 July 2023
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ravage

2 of 2 verb
  • In fact, two-thirds of the men had come aboard ravaged with scurvy.
    Mike O’Brien, The New Yorker, 9 Nov. 2023
  • This war, that has ravaged so much of the earth, has written these words.
    Charles Oppenheimer, Variety, 27 Feb. 2024
  • But in the places the storm ravaged, the extent of the destruction had not yet come into clear view.
    Derrick Bryson Taylor, New York Times, 26 Oct. 2023
  • Afghanistan has long been one of Asia’s poorest countries and has been ravaged by conflict for decades.
    Heather Chen, CNN, 9 Oct. 2023
  • After being ravaged by injuries over the past few months, the Vikings looked like a group with nothing left to give as the game clock hit 0:00 for the last time.
    Dane Mizutani, Twin Cities, 7 Jan. 2024
  • The historic city of Antakya was one of the places most ravaged by an earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria on Feb. 6.
    Sarah Dadouch, Washington Post, 20 Feb. 2023
  • The number hasn’t been that low since the pandemic began ravaging the state more than three years ago.
    Martin Finucane, BostonGlobe.com, 2 May 2023
  • The crack cocaine epidemic ravaged Chicago in the 1980s.
    Ashley R. Williams, CNN, 31 Mar. 2024
  • Opal Lee, the grandmother of Juneteenth, was able to see her home raised again on the lot were her childhood home was ravaged and burned.
    Candi Bolden, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 24 Mar. 2024
  • She’s ravaged with guilt, but also wants to be free of everything.
    Emily Zemler, Rolling Stone, 14 Sep. 2023
  • Like the tech and music industries, media has been ravaged by layoffs over the past 15 months.
    Elias Leight, Billboard, 17 Jan. 2024
  • New York’s offensive line has been ravaged by injury, and the team ranks last in the NFL in third-down and red-zone conversion rate.
    Jeff Miller, Los Angeles Times, 6 Nov. 2023
  • The Quiet Place series takes place in a world in which blind, monster-like aliens hunt down anything that makes a sound, ravaging the Earth.
    Aaron Couch, The Hollywood Reporter, 27 Apr. 2023
  • Soot charred one side of the building as flames also ravaged two vehicles..
    Rosalio Ahumada, Sacramento Bee, 10 Feb. 2024
  • But the seeds for both were sown during the decade before, when AIDS ravaged through the theater community.
    Marissa Charles, Peoplemag, 1 Mar. 2023
  • This week, wildfires in Maui have ravaged the island, killing at least 80 people.
    Dan Heching, CNN, 12 Aug. 2023
  • And, of course, bottom-trawlers can ravage thousand-year-old meadows in a matter of minutes.
    Tristan Kennedy, WIRED, 19 Mar. 2024
  • There are fears that rebuilding from the wildfires that ravaged Maui over the summer will lead to even more displacement.
    Adam Yamaguchi, CBS News, 4 Nov. 2023
  • Oil-rich Libya has been ravaged by conflict since the fall of its longtime dictator, Moammar Gaddafi, in 2011.
    Kareem Fahim, Washington Post, 13 Sep. 2023
  • As other workers fled, Perkins lost consciousness and was trapped inside the plant for about forty minutes while the gas ravaged her eyes, throat, and lungs.
    Casey Tolan, CNN, 4 May 2023
  • Here’s a guide on how to keep cool and stay safe in the punishing temperatures as the latest heat wave ravaging the country spreads east.
    Rio Yamat, Chicago Tribune, 3 July 2023
  • The fires that have ravaged the Texas Panhandles are proving to be costly, not just financially for the state, but for the livelihoods of many.
    Li Cohen, CBS News, 13 Mar. 2024
  • The climate has been destroyed, the cities are ravaged, and the human race is experimenting with colonies in space that the residents of earth could move to.
    Owen Gleiberman, Variety, 30 Sep. 2023
  • This exacerbates droughts and sets the stage for wildfires like those that have ravaged Canada this summer.
    Sarah Kaplan, Anchorage Daily News, 13 July 2023
  • Migrants will play crucial roles in the retrofitting of host nations to cope with the climate volatility that has ravaged their own–helping to future-proof their economies in the process.
    Parag Khanna, Fortune Europe, 1 Dec. 2023
  • Most of those people are from South Sudan, a nation that split from Sudan in 2011 and has been ravaged by civil war ever since.
    Lynsey Chutel, BostonGlobe.com, 24 Apr. 2023
  • This vegetation provided fuel for the wildfires that ravaged the state in the summer and fall of 2019.
    Jamie Hailstone, Forbes, 17 July 2023
  • Soon, these two will spend long nights ravaging each other, dumping corpses, dodging bullets, and running for their lives.
    David Fear, Rolling Stone, 21 Jan. 2024
  • Soot charred one side of the structure as flames also ravaged two vehicles, according to photos and videos shared by Wilbourn.
    Ishani Desai, Sacramento Bee, 29 Jan. 2024
  • Despite being ravaged by injuries and suspensions, their season largely a throwaway, Wednesday’s game with the Lakers was their first time this year to host the team that ousted them last spring.
    Dan Woike, Los Angeles Times, 28 Mar. 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'ravage.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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