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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
moneylender
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ After World War I, 50 percent of the land was mortgaged to moneylenders by owner-tenant farmers.
▪ Everyone, however, sympathized with junior officials; and everyone constantly wished a violent death on usurers and moneylenders.
▪ No figure is given for moneylenders.
▪ Samuel's large stall was in the rue de Sanghines, the street of the moneylenders.
▪ The moneylenders then looked to Sim for the cash and threatened him and his family.
▪ The Carey family had to rely on a house provided by a Bengali moneylender to save them from destitution.
▪ The mandarins also kept an eye on any emerging capitalists, merchants, moneylenders and nouveaux riches.
▪ The plaintiff moneylenders offered a loan to the son on the security of his parents' property.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
moneylender

moneylender \moneylender\ n. someone who lends money at excessive rates of interest.

Syn: usurer, loan shark, shark, money-lender.

Wiktionary
moneylender

n. A person who lends money and charges interest, especially one who is not part of the official financial industry

WordNet
moneylender

n. someone who lends money at excessive rates of interest [syn: usurer, loan shark, shylock]

Wikipedia
Moneylender

A moneylender is a person or group who typically offers small personal loans at high rates of interest and is distinct from banks and financial institutions that typically provide such loans. The high interest rates charged by them is justified in many cases by the risk involved.

They play an active role in lending to people with less access to banking activities, such as the unbanked or underbanked or in situations where borrowers do not have good credit history. They sometimes lend to people like gamblers and compulsive shoppers who often get into debt.

Many countries have laws in place that require moneylenders to be registered, and set limits on the interest rates that may be charged. For example, in India licensed moneylenders are governed by Money Lenders Acts of respective states.

A paper from the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab found that people living in poverty tend to borrow money from moneylenders (as well as relatives) rather than banks. For example, in the Udaipur sample they used, 18% of those who borrowed money borrowed from moneylenders compared to 6.4% from a formal source (like a bank). In the urban Hyderabad sample, 52% of those who borrow money borrow from moneylenders compared to 5% from commercial banks.

Usage examples of "moneylender".

In fact, the stewards had deposited the bulk of that coin with moneylenders in Novae and Prista and Durostorum, with the result that every eight of my invested solidi earned me one additional solidus in interest every year.

The bank snatched the house back, and the moneylenders decided to give me a rough time.

She had no intention of leaving Liverpool until Georgie was well and truly settled in a new place, and wanted to be certain that the moneylenders were off her back for good.

She would cope with that, but moneylenders were a different kind of trouble.

Jack have freed me from the moneylenders, I have to look after myself.

And, learned Mithridates, these moneylenders were usually employees of the tax-farming companies, though the companies had no share in the money lending.

Asellio could enforce his revival of that old law, the moneylenders heard of his intention and petitioned him to reopen the bankruptcy courts.

Included among the senatorial moneylenders was Lucius Cassius, a tribune of the plebs.

A few days after his confrontation with the moneylenders he was already taking the auspices when he noticed that the crowd in the Forum below him was much larger than the usual gathering to witness an augury.

But even among the senatorial moneylenders opposition was halfhearted, as everyone could appreciate that collecting some money was better than collecting none, and Sulla had not attempted to abolish interest entirely.

Though the moneylenders were not Roman officials, they employed Roman officials to collect when debts became delinquent.

Led by one of their tribal elders known in Latin as Brogus, they had arrived to protest to the Senate against their treatment by a series of governors like Gaius Calpurnius Piso, and by certain moneylenders masquerading as bankers.

Roman Republican times, but one I have used to describe men deputed to keep law and order if lictors were not employed, and also to describe men employed by moneylenders to harass a debtor and prevent his absconding.

The moneylenders to whom the thirty-six-year-old rake owed millions began to dun him so persistently and unpleasantly that he hardly dared show his face in the better parts of Rome.

Then the revelation about Papa's blackmailing the unfortunate young man had been borne out by the moneylenders, who had descended upon the widowed Mrs.