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pound of flesh
noun
something that is one's legal right but is an unreasonable demand (esp in the phrase to have one's pound of flesh )
pound of flesh
1Creditors who insist on having their “pound of flesh” are those who cruelly demand the repayment of a debt, no matter how much suffering it will cost the debtor: “The bank will have its pound of flesh; it is going to foreclose on our mortgage and force us to sell our home.” The expression is from The Merchant of Venice, by William Shakespeare.
pound of flesh
2A phrase from the play The Merchant of Venice, by William Shakespeare. The moneylender Shylock demands the flesh of the “merchant of Venice,” Antonio, under a provision in their contract. Shylock never gets the pound of flesh, however, because the character Portia discovers a point of law that overrides the contract: Shylock is forbidden to shed any blood in getting the flesh from Antonio's body.
Word History and Origins
Origin of pound of flesh1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
He did not have the authority to prevent the calamitous collapse of Lehman Brothers, and even after Congress authorized unprecedented executive power with the $700-billion Troubled Asset Relief Program and Newsweek dubbed him King Henry, pundits and citizens alike complained that we weren’t extracting a sufficient pound of flesh for the assistance the George W. Bush administration provided to the banks, whose flawed risk management was a root cause of the crisis.
The past always, always, always returns, looking for its pound of flesh.
“Everybody wants a pound of flesh,” he said.
The BJP may now be “heavily dependent on the goodwill of its allies, which makes them critical players who we can expect will extract their pound of flesh, both in terms of policymaking as well as government formation,” said Milan Vaishnav, director of the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
In the end, he said, prosecutors “exacted the requisite pound of flesh from Mr. Falaschi. Or at least an ounce.”
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