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Rapacity   Listen
Rapacity

noun
1.
Extreme gluttony.  Synonyms: edacity, esurience, rapaciousness, voraciousness, voracity.
2.
Reprehensible acquisitiveness; insatiable desire for wealth (personified as one of the deadly sins).  Synonyms: avarice, avaritia, covetousness, greed.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Rapacity" Quotes from Famous Books



... "I earnestly pray that may be so," Mr. Marrapit said. "I doubt. Rapacity and greed stalk the land. Mrs. Major had five-and-twenty pounds per annum. I will not go above ...
— Once Aboard The Lugger • Arthur Stuart-Menteth Hutchinson

... bald and shocking sort of drama has an obviously autobiographical basis. His own road ran into strange places in the days of his youth. He moved among men who were menaced by all the terrestrial cruelties, and by the almost unchecked rivalry and rapacity of their fellow men, without any appreciable barriers, whether of law, of convention or of sentimentality, to shield them. The struggle for existence, as he saw it, was well nigh as purely physical ...
— A Book of Prefaces • H. L. Mencken

... did not hear. Tom Teeter was standing down there between the rows of cabbages, talking to Mr. Gordon upon the "Conscienceless greed and onmitigated rapacity" of certain emissaries of the opposing political party. To all of which his neighbor was responding with: "Well, well. Deary ...
— 'Lizbeth of the Dale • Marian Keith

... bankrupt. He was in debt to the Company tenfold more than he could pay, and all his revenues were sequestered for that debt. He was a person of the last degree of indolence with the last degree of rapacity,—a man of whom Mr. Hastings declared, that he had wasted and destroyed by his misgovernment the fairest provinces upon earth, that not a person in his dominions was secure from his violence, and that even his own father could ...
— The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. XI. (of 12) • Edmund Burke

... struggle had been going on, even after the radicals had gained the mastery. As a counterpoise to John of Giscala the citizens had received the guerilla captain Simon bar Giora into the city; the two were now at feud with each other, but were alike in their rapacity towards the citizens. John occupied the temple, Simon the upper city Iying over against it on the west. For a short time a third entered into competition with the two rivals, a certain Eleazar who ...
— Prolegomena to the History of Israel • Julius Wellhausen


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