Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun Wealth or riches, especially when dishonestly acquired.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun Frippery; rubbish; refuse; trash.
- noun Money; riches; “filtby lucre”: a contemptuous term. It has no plural.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun Money; riches; lucre; gain; -- generally conveying the idea of something ill-gotten or worthless. It has no plural.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun
money ;riches ;gain ; especially whendishonestly acquired (cf.lucre )
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun informal terms for money
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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They may talk as they please about what they call pelf,
The Profits of Religion, Fifth Edition Upton Sinclair 1923
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They may talk as they please about what they call pelf,
The Profits of Religion: An Essay in Economic Interpretation 1918
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They may talk as they please about what they call pelf,
English Satires Various 1885
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They may talk as they please about what they call pelf,
English Satires Various 1885
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The man was evidently consumed by ambition, highly interested in pelf and preferment, and a natural Tory who defended the slave trade and imperialism, which Adam Smith so much deplored.
Triumph at Trafalgar 2005
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The man was evidently consumed by ambition, highly interested in pelf and preferment, and a natural Tory who defended the slave trade and imperialism, which Adam Smith so much deplored.
Triumph at Trafalgar 2005
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These are wenches and they are always seeking only pelf.
So No More He'll Go A-Roving David Mason 2011
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Immortal gods I pray no pelf I speak for no-one but myself and so forth.
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Why, the deals that the White house offered for our votes on the Healthcare Reform Bill are laughable next to the bribes, uh, we mean pelf, oh no, we mean incentives that will be coming from the corporate world.
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These are wenches and they are always seeking only pelf.
So No More He'll Go A-Roving David Mason 2011
grammar commented on the word pelf
The ultimate question in the derivative suit, is whether a sentient and alert corporate Board of Directors...would conclude he is entitled to depart from its employ while claiming pelf approaching $800,000,000.
December 28, 2007
chained_bear commented on the word pelf
"A miser's mind thou hast
Thou has a prince's pelf
Which makes thee wealthy to thine heir--
A beggar to thyself."
--I forget, but I want to say "Shakespeare"
December 28, 2007
yarb commented on the word pelf
For some reason I always thought this word meant animal hide or fur.
January 4, 2008
sarra commented on the word pelf
That would be because of pelt.
January 4, 2008
yarb commented on the word pelf
I suppose so. But my mistaken definition of pelf was concurrent with a correct understanding of pelt. For some reason the phrase "matted pelf" sticks in my mind.
January 4, 2008
yarb commented on the word pelf
Curiouser, "matted pelf" is (or was, until now) a googlewhack. I now feel drawn by kismet towards the poet Gongora.
January 4, 2008
minerva commented on the word pelf
For though your honour is kind to me in worldly pelf, yet what shall a man get to lose his soul, as holy scripture says, and please your honour?
Joseph Leman to Lovelace, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson
January 4, 2008
yarb commented on the word pelf
I was dazzled by the gold and jewels which he laid out in burning row before me, and became a living monument in my own person, that miraculous transformations are effected by the power of pelf, as well as by the wand of love.
- Lesage, The Adventures of Gil Blas of Santillane, tr. Smollett, bk 7 ch. 7
September 30, 2008
knitandpurl commented on the word pelf
"Of course, he isn't literally a fishmonger (I don't believe he even likes fish), because this is a City Livery Company, and while the Fishmongers' retains more links with the trade than, say, the Goldsmiths' it is in essence a living fossil; a medieval guild, cemented to the Square Mile like an oyster, through which flows a great current of nutritious pelf."
Psychogeography by Will Self, 138
October 16, 2010
rolig commented on the word pelf
In John Keats' narrative poem "Isabella", the heroine's materialistic brothers are referred to as "those Baälites of pelf" – invective worth remembering.
June 30, 2015