Definition of "ravish"
ravish
verb
third-person singular simple present ravishes, present participle ravishing, simple past and past participle ravished
(obsolete or archaic) To seize and carry away by violence; to snatch by force.
Quotations
The French Government had not taken regular possession of it when the war with England broke out; and Bonaparte hastened to sell that Province to the Americans, who had already cast their eyes upon it, with the view both of preventing the English from ravishing it from him, and of procuring funds to carry on the war.
1901, Thomas Henry Dyer, A History of Modern Europe from the Fall of Constantinople: 1789-1815
(transitive, usually passive voice) To transport with joy or delight; to delight to ecstasy.
Quotations
That in things that do ravish with delight, men were not Masters of themselves, nor could they remember Gallateo's Rules; and that in time of Carnival, it was lawful to commit exorbitances.
1669, Trafano Bocalini, translated by Henry Earl of Monmouth, Advertisements from Parnassus: In Two Centuries, translation of original in Italian
(transitive, now rare) To rape.
Quotations
A tall Bulgarian soldier, six feet high, perceiving that I had fainted away at this sight, attempted to ravish me; the operation brought me to my senses. I cried, I struggled, I bit, I scratched, I would have torn the tall Bulgarian’s eyes out, not knowing that what had happened at my father’s castle was a customary thing.
1759, Voltaire, chapter 8, in Candide, archived from the original on 3 September 2010