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Wealth regarded as an evil influence
Answer for the clue "Wealth regarded as an evil influence ", 6 letters:
mammon
Alternative clues for the word mammon
Word definitions for mammon in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES Ye cannot serve God and Mammon
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"personification of wealth," mid-14c., from Late Latin mammona , from Greek mamonas , from Aramaic mamona , mamon "riches, gain;" left untranslated in Greek New Testament (e.g. Matt. vi:24, Luke xvi:9-13) retained in the Vulgate, and regarded mistakenly ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Mammon \Mam"mon\ (m[a^]m"m[u^]n), n. [L. mammona, Gr. mammwna^s riches, Syr. mam[=o]n[=a]; cf. Heb. matm[=o]n a hiding place, subterranean storehouse, treasury, fr. t[=a]man to hide.] Riches; wealth; the god of riches; riches, personified. Ye can not serve ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. wealth regarded as an evil influence (New Testament) a personification of wealth and avarice as an evil spirit; "ye cannot serve God and Mammon"
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Mammon is a term from the Christian Bible used to describe material wealth or greed, often personified. Mammon may also refer to:
Usage examples of mammon.
Like many another who had had Mammon by the tail, Conant did not know when to let go.
And though I am clean Got off from Subtle, Surly, Mammon, Dol, Hot Ananias, Dapper, Drugger, all With whom I traded: yet I put my self On you, that are my country: and this pelf Which I have got, if you do quit me, rests To feast you often, and invite new guests.
Those fancy temples to almighty Mammon burned with remarkable gusto despite all the fireproof rugs and drapes, asbestos tiling, and years of accumulated Allstate premiums guaranteeing that No Harm would ever befall the indulgent bailiwicks at the top of our social, economic, and criminal food chain .
True, a faction suspended judgment for a while, because they shot, and hoped that Midmore would serve the glorious mammon of pheasant-raising rather than the unkempt god of fox-hunting.
Lady Lufton, who was very staunch, did not like this, and would say of Miss Dunstable that it was impossible to serve both God and Mammon.
And man, through the dust and the mire, Toils onward, as toils the dull bullock, Unreasoning, brutish, and blind, With Ashtaroth, Mammon, and Moloch In front, and Alecto behind.
While we entertain due respect and fellowship for what is good and doing good in all denominations of religion, and shun whatever would isolate us from a true sense of goodness in others--we cannot serve mammon.
To him it was as the cave of Aladdin to the worshipper of Mammon, and yet now he would often sit down indifferent to its hoarded splendours, and gather no jewels.
In the hierarchy of hell this put him far below the archdemons like Mammon, master of avarice, but far above the blue-collar demons like Arrrgg, who was responsible for leeching the styrofoam taste into take-out coffee.
Infinite moe, tormented in like paineHe there beheld, too long here to be told:Ne Mammon would there let him long remaine,For terrour of the tortures manifold,In which the damned soules he did behold,But roughly him bespake.
So soone as Mammon there arriu'd, the doreTo him did open, and affoorded way.
The conversations she'd had with Jimmy Hornbeck as they drove to Anahola, talking about mystery and Mammon.
The Mammon Emporium offers brand-name concessions and fast-food chains from alternative universes and divergent timetracks.
And the Republic became an Empire, and soon Due Process and Equal Rights for All were not worshipped, and even Mammon and Power were given only lip-service, for the true god of all was now the impotent What Can I Do and his dull brother What We Did Yesterday and his ugly and vicious sister Get Them Before They Get Us.
It was Darcourt who persuaded Francis to read the works of Ben Jonson in a fine First Folio, and because of that Francis often addressed McVarish as Sir Epicure Mammon -- a reference McVarish never troubled to check, and assumed to be complimentary.