Use your index file listanome.txt to make a script to be used by sed to remove the lines:
To a listanome.txt as below...
$ cat listanome.txt 
ze
jao
juca
...the following sed turns into an delete script for each name in the list:
$ sed 's/^/\//; s/$/\/d/' listanome.txt
/ze/d
/jao/d
/juca/d
So, pass such a command sed to the flag -f of a new sed, which will execute such a script on all files to be affected, supposedly contained in the directory caminho:
$ sed --in-place=.bak -f <(sed 's/^/\//; s/$/\/d/' listanome.txt) /caminho/*
This will delete all lines from all files in the directory caminho containing the names of listanome.txt, backing up with the extension ". Bak" for each changed file.
If your requirement changes, change the first sed according to what you want, for example:
- To delete all lines identical to the index: - $ sed 's/^/\/^/; s/$/$\/d/' listanome.txt
/^ze$/d
/^jao$/d
/^juca$/d
 
- To replace the line contents with the string "REMOVE": - $ sed 's/^/\/^\.\*/; s/$/\.\*$\/REMOVER\/g/' listanome.txt
/^.*ze.*$/REMOVER/g
/^.*jao.*$/REMOVER/g
/^.*juca.*$/REMOVER/g
 
 
I think this one can work!! Great, let me play and return here :)
– Rafael Galo
It worked perfectly, you rock! VLW!
– Rafael Galo