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Returns vs Pelf - What's the difference?

returns | pelf | Related terms |

Returns is a related term of pelf.


As nouns the difference between returns and pelf

is that returns is while pelf is money; riches; gain; especially when dishonestly acquired (compare lucre).

As a verb returns

is (return).

returns

English

Noun

(head)
  • (pluralonly) Merchandise returned to a retailer or wholesaler by a purchaser.
  • (pluralonly) Unsold merchandise returned to the supplier.
  • * {{quote-book, year=2002
  • , author=Irina Dunn , title=The writer's guide , chapter= citation , isbn= , page=129 , passage=The number of unsold books that booksellers return to publishers (called the rate of returns ) has been averaging between 25 per cent and 35 per cent.}}

    Verb

    (head)
  • (return)
  • Anagrams

    * turners

    See also

    * many happy returns

    pelf

    English

    Noun

    (-)
  • money; riches; gain; especially when dishonestly acquired (compare lucre)
  • * 1906 , Frederick Tatham, Life of Blake'' in Archibald George Blomefield Russell (ed.), ''The Letters of William Blake :
  • But, sighing after his fancies and visionary pursuits, he rebelled and fled fifty miles away for refuge from the lace caps and powdered wigs of his priggish sitters, and resumed his quaint dreams and immeasurable phantasies, never more to forsake them for pelf and portraiture.
  • * February 20, 2000 , Nick Cohen, Without prejudice , The Observer:
  • . . . a master manipulator who will twist and dodge around the clock to keep the privileges of power and pelf .
  • * July 20, 1997 , Harriet P. Gross, Author roots her stories in Vietnam War , Dallas Morning News:
  • She writes about those she might have known first-hand: teenage girls cowering in bunkers . . . friends making promises they can never keep . . . rich folk fattened on wartime pelf , poor folk surviving by wit alone.
  • * April 27, 1987 , Ford S. Worthy, You're Probably Working Too Hard , Fortune:
  • In advertising, show business, and journalism, people work themselves to the nub for glitz and glory more than for pelf .
  • * October 1968 , Nicholas von Hoffman, The Class of '43 Is Puzzled , The Atlantic:
  • Some of the rich classmates were keeping their pelf to themselves.