What is another word for usury?

Pronunciation: [jˈuːzjʊɹi] (IPA)

Usury is a term that describes the practice of charging high interest rates on loans. This practice is often seen as financially unethical and exploitative. However, there are many different ways to describe this behavior. Some synonyms for usury include loan sharking, gouging, predatory lending, and extortion. Each of these terms highlights a different aspect of the practice of charging high interest rates. Loan sharking suggests illegal or underhanded behavior. Gouging implies excessive or unfair rates. Predatory lending indicates a deliberate effort to take advantage of vulnerable borrowers. Extortion portrays an act of coercion or intimidation. Regardless of the term used, it is important to recognize and address the problem of usury and its negative impact on individuals and communities.

What are the paraphrases for Usury?

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What are the hypernyms for Usury?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Usury?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

Usage examples for Usury

Now, in these ideas about truck and usury, as in the proposals previously touched upon for checking the growth of disease or cowardice or ignorance, is not the principle of social politics that is applied by Smith precisely the principle that runs through our whole recent social legislation-factory, sanitary, and educational-the principle of the State's obligation to secure the people in the essential conditions of all normal manhood?
"Contemporary Socialism"
John Rae
It wouldn't satisfy me to discharge a life-rent of five hundred and fifty francs for three thousand francs; that would be usury.
"Monsieur Cherami"
Charles Paul de Kock
What are you talking about with your usury?
"Monsieur Cherami"
Charles Paul de Kock

Famous quotes with Usury

  • For at least another hundred years we must pretend to ourselves and to every one that fair is foul and foul is fair; for foul is useful and fair is not. Avarice and usury and precaution must be our gods for a little longer still.
    John Maynard Keynes
  • This (The launching of an invasion into Armenia) was itself hazardous; but the smallness of the number (of the army, not more than 15,000 men) might be in some degree compensated by the tried valour of the army consisting throughout of veterans. A much worse circumstance was the temper of the soldiers, to which Lucullus, in his high aristocratic fashion, had given far too little heed. Lucullus was an able general, and - according to the aristocratic standard - an upright and benevolent man, but very far from being a favorite with his soldiers. He was unpopular, as a decided adherent of the oligarghy;unpopular, because he had vigorously checked the monstrous usury of the Roman capitalists in Asia Minor; unpopular, on account of the toils and fatigues which he inflicted on his troops; unpopular, because he demanded strict discipline in his soldiers and prevented as far as possible the pillage of the Greek towns by his men, but withal caused many a waggon and many a camel to be alden with the treasures of the East for himself; unpopular too on account of his manner, which was polished, stately, Hellenising, not at all familiar, and inclining, wherever it was possible, to ease and pleasure. There was no trace in him of the charm which creates a personal bond between the general and the soldier.
    Theodor Mommsen
  • As we now know, in the evolution of the structure of human activities, profitability works as a signal that guides selection towards what makes man more fruitful; only what is more profitable will, as a rule, nourish more people, for it sacrifices less than it adds. So much was at least sensed by some Greeks prior to Aristotle. Indeed, in the fifth century - that is, before Aristotle - the first truly great historian began his history of the Peloponnesian War by reflecting how early people `without commerce, without freedom of communication either by land or sea, cultivating no more of their territory than the exigencies of life required, could never rise above nomadic life' and consequently `neither built large cities nor attained to any other form of greatness' (Thucydides, Crawly translation, 1,1,2). But Aristotle ignored this insight. Had the Athenians followed Aristotle's counsel - counsel blind both to economics and to evolution - their city would rapidly have shrunk into a village, for his view of human ordering led him to an ethics appropriate only to, if anywhere at all, a stationary state. Nonetheless his doctrines came to dominate philosophical and religious thinking for the next two thousand years - despite the fact that much of that same philosophical and religious thinking took place within a highly dynamic, rapidly extending, order.(...) The anti-commercial attitude of the mediaeval and early modern Church, condemnation of interest as usury, its teaching of the just price, and its contemptuous treatment of gain is Aristotelian through and through. (...) Notwithstanding, and indeed wholly neglecting, the existence of this great advance, a view that is still permeated by Aristotelian thought, a naive and childlike animistic view of the world (Piaget, 1929:359), has come to dominate social theory and is the foundation of socialist thought.
    Aristotle
  • I judged the Poles by their enemies. And I found it was an almost unfailing- truth that their enemies were the enemies of magna- nimity and manhood. If a man loved slavery, if he loved usury, if he loved terrorism and all the trampled mire of materialistic politics, I have always found that he added to these affections the passion of a hatred of Poland. She could be judged in the light of that hatred; and the judgment has proved to be right.
    G. K. Chesterton
  • I’ve lived most of my life already and I suppose I can argue myself into believing that I have no great cause to love humanity. However, only a few people have hurt me, and if I hurt everyone in return that is unconscionable usury.
    Isaac Asimov

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