Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun A ruthless moneylender; a loan shark.
  • intransitive verb To lend money at exorbitant interest rates.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun US A loan shark.
  • verb intransitive, US To lend money at exorbitant rates of interest.

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[After Shylock, the ruthless Jewish usurer in William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice who demands a pound of his debtor's flesh as compensation for default upon a loan.]

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From the character Shylock, in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice

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Examples

  • State law uses "shylock" in a statute dealing with loan sharks, language that is "offensive to the Jewish people," said state Sen. Eleanor Sobel, a Democrat.

    Latest News 2009

  • State law uses "shylock" in a statute dealing with loan sharks, language that is "offensive to the Jewish people," said state Sen. Eleanor Sobel, a Democrat.

    Latest News 2009

  • State law uses "shylock" in a statute dealing with loan sharks, language that is "offensive to the Jewish people," said state Sen. Eleanor Sobel, a Democrat.

    Latest News 2009

  • State law uses "shylock" in a statute dealing with loan sharks, language that is "offensive to the Jewish people," said state Sen. Eleanor Sobel, a Democrat.

    Latest News 2009

  • If you're like me, you'd rather work with your customers than play shylock, but at some point enough is enough.

    Make Them Pay Robert Bovarnick 2010

  • In "Crazy as a Soup Sandwich," a script that was a produced episode of the second incarnation of the Twilight Zone television show, a low-rent petty crook and shylock, Arky Lochner, makes an ill-advised deal with the Devil—well, a demon, at least, and his time is about to run out.

    Cell Phonery Steve Perry 2010

  • At the present time, Parisi had almost two million dollars on the street in shylock loans, which brought in close to twenty thousand a week in interest.

    The Big Scam Paul Lindsay 2005

  • CAFFERTY: Take my taxes to a shylock and get them done before I go out, just based on that commercial.

    CNN Transcript Feb 2, 2004 2004

  • After the briefest of pauses, Reid launched into a long anecdote about a shylock named Salvatore Marriano who took payment in salted herring from a destitute fishmonger named Bernard Boyle.

    Little Girl Blue Cray, David 2002

  • The man was known to occasionally shylock to businessmen and desperate oil wildcatters.

    American Tabloid Ellroy, James, 1948- 1995

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