raven

RAVEN, noun ra'ven. [Heb. from its color. But this may be Latin corvus, rapio.]


A large fowl of a black color, of the genus Corvus.


RAVEN, verb transitive rav'n.


1. To devour with great eagerness; to eat with voracity.


Our natures do pursue, like rats that raven down their proper bane, a thirsty evil, and when we drink, we die.


Like a roaring lion, ravening the prey. Ezekiel 22:25.


2. To obtain by violence.


RAVEN, verb intransitive rav'n. To prey with rapacity.


Benjamin shall raven as a wolf. Genesis 49:1.


RAVEN, noun rav'n.


1. Prey; plunder; food obtained by violence. Nahum 2.


2. Rapine; rapacity.


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