-
excess of the
maximum rate that is
allowed by law. A loan may be
considered usurious because of
excessive or
abusive interest rates or
other factors defined...
-
specifically of England.
Shylock /
Shyster Jewish people perceived as
greedy or
usurious From the
antagonistic character of Shylock, a
Jewish money-lender, in William...
-
judgment over a customer.
These licensing laws made it
impossible for
usurious lenders to p****
themselves off as legal.
Small loans also
started becoming...
-
government heavily restricted the
merchants and
viewed them as
unproductive and
usurious members of society, the samurai, who
gradually became separated from their...
-
towards their subjects. The
behavior of Mongolia's nobility,
together with
usurious practices by
Chinese traders and the
collection of
imperial taxes in silver...
-
sometimes coerced to pay taxes, many
adivasis were
forced to
borrow at
usurious rates from moneylenders,
often the
zamindars themselves. When they were...
-
activities by Jews,
preventing certain financial activities (such as "
usurious" loans)[page needed]
between Christians, high
rates of literacy, near-universal...
- risk. Hence,
although sufficiently high
interest rates are
considered usurious,
unsecured loans would not be made at all
without them.
Unsecured loans...
- some
countries have been
accused by
consumer organizations of
lending at
usurious interest rates and
making money out of
frivolous "extra charges". Abuses...
- use of by
antisemites throughout the play's history. The ****s used the
usurious Shylock for
their propaganda.
Shortly after Kristallnacht in 1938, The...