conscience money
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See also: conscience-money
English
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Noun
[edit]conscience money (uncountable)
- (idiomatic) Money which is voluntarily paid by a party who feels guilt, and seeks to provide compensation, for some past misdeed or negligence.
- 1865 November 23, “From Washington”, in New York Times, retrieved 24 August 2014:
- The Secretary of the Treasury is almost daily in receipt of installments of conscience-money, which the perturbed moral sense of a guilty office-holder or other defrauder of the government suggests the payment of in order to obtain "a still and quiet conscience."
- 1918, Eleanor H. Porter, chapter 1, in Oh, Money! Money!:
- "Whatever I've done, I've always been criticized. . . . If I donated to a church, it was called conscience money; and if I didn't donate to it, they said I was mean and miserly."
- 1994 May 3, Richard Dowden, “most-south-africans-will-not-see-newfound-wealth-overnight-says-richard-dowden-1433381.html Big Mac and Coke? Not so fast . . .: Most South Africans will not see new-found wealth overnight”, in The Independent, UK, retrieved 24 August 2014:
- Other US companies, keen to be seen making the politically correct investment now, are bringing ‘conscience money’ to the new South Africa.
- 2010 November 28, Paul Harris, “Tony Blair v Christopher Hitchens: fight the good fight”, in Guardian, UK, retrieved 24 August 2014:
- He described the aid work done by religious missions as "conscience money" to make up for the harm they have done.
Translations
[edit]money which is voluntarily paid by a party who feels guilt
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See also
[edit]References
[edit]- “conscience money”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.