shylock
See also: Shylock
English
WOTD – 24 May 2012, 24 May 2013, 24 May 2014, 24 May 2015
Alternative forms
Etymology
From the character Shylock in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (1600).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈʃaɪlɑk/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈʃaɪlɒk/
Audio (General Australian): (file) - Hyphenation: shy‧lock
Noun
shylock (plural shylocks)
- (US, figurative, now offensive) A loan shark; a usurer. [1786[1]]
- 2009, G. T. Harrell, For Members Only: The Story of the Mob's Secret Judge, A True Story[2], page 229:
- If a guy got into hock with several shylocks from different crews and was unable to keep up with his weekly payments, a sit-down would have to be called with all of the shylocks involved and their respective capos.
- 2013, James Lee Burke, Light of the World[3], page 429:
- After Caspian's father killed his credit lines at all the big casinos, he ran up a six-figure tab with a couple of shylocks in Miami, then couldn't make the vig.
- (offensive, ethnic slur) A person of Jewish descent. [1950s[2]]
Translations
loan shark — see loan shark
Verb
shylock (third-person singular simple present shylocks, present participle shylocking, simple past and past participle shylocked)
- (intransitive, US, now offensive) To lend money at exorbitant rates of interest.
- 2004 December 8, Kenya National Assembly Official Record (Hansard), page 4928:
- I wanted to know whether shylocking is a legal business or not, and if it is legal, under which Act does it operate?
- 2005, Tom Layne, The Assassination of Rush Limbaugh, page 151:
- When you've accumulated a good stash of money, you may want to go into the nightclub business, or shylocking. Shylocking is free. There is no ten percent vig on loan sharking.
- 2005, Jeannette Walls, The Glass Castle[4], published 2010:
- Lori said it sounded outright felonious, but Dad said all he was doing was outsmarting the fat-cat bank owners who shylocked the common man by charging usurious interest rates.
Translations
to lend at exorbitant rates
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References
- ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2025) “shylock”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
- ^ Jonathon Green (1996) Words Apart: The Language of Prejudice, Kyle Cathie Limited, →ISBN, page 324
Further reading
- shylock on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Merchant of Venice on Wikipedia.Wikipedia