Loot

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early 19th century (as a verb): from Hindi lūṭ, from Sanskrit luṇṭh- ‘rob’.


Ety img loot.png

wiktionary

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From Middle Dutch loet, loete("scoop, shovel, scraper"; > Modern Dutch loet), from Old Dutch *lōta, from Old Frankish *lōtija(“scoop, ladle”), from Proto-Germanic *hlōþþijō(“ladle”), from Proto-Indo-European *kleh₂-(“to lay down, deposit, overlay”). Cognate with Scots lute, luyt(“scoop, ladle”), West Frisian loete, lete, Middle Low German lōte(“rake”), French louche("ladle"; < Germanic). Related to lade, ladle.

Attested 1788, a loan from Hindustani लूट(lūṭ)/ لوٹ‎ (lūṭ, “spoil, booty”), from Sanskrit लुण्ट्(luṇṭ, “to rob, plunder”). The verb is from 1842. Fallows (1885) records both the noun and the verb as "Recent. Anglo-Indian".

In origin only applicable to plundering in warfare.

A figurative meaning developed in American English in the 1920s, resulting in a generalized meaning by the 1950s.


etymonline

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loot (n.)

"goods taken from an enemy, etc.," 1802 (in Charles James's "Military Dictionary," London, which defines it as "Indian term for plunder or pillage"), Anglo-Indian, from Hindi lut, from Sanskrit loptram, lotram "booty, stolen property," from PIE *roup-tro-, from root *reup- "to snatch" (see rip (v.)).


LOOTICS, Ind. A term in India to express a body of irregular horsemen, who plunder and lay waste the country, and harrass the enemy in their march. They may be compared to the Hulans of Europe and other free-booters.

LOOTY WALLOW, Ind. A term of the same import as Lootics.

[James, "Military Dictionary"]




loot (v.)

"to plunder; carry off as loot," 1821, from loot (n.). Related: Looted; looting.