Verb.
1. To deprive (someone) of something, as by fraud,
extortion; swindle
2. To obtain (money or the like) by fraud or extortion
3. To punish (a person) by fine, especially for
misdemeanor
Noun
4. A fine, especially for a misdemeanor
What an odd, fascinating word!
According to the dictionary, mulct derives from
mul(c)ta, a Latin word meaning penalty, especially pertaining to loss of
property.
Why is it on Hopper’s radar this evening?
Because I stumbled across it during my current read, a
recent biography of Napoleon Bonaparte. Immediately flashing lights went off
inside my head (no, this was not an epileptic episode), and an imaginary klaxon
wailed far away, something reminiscent of air raid sirens across the British
countryside three-quarter of a century ago. And that was it! That was the link!
Three months earlier I met this odd word for the first time – while reading
Crusade in Europe, General Eisenhower’s memoirs of the Second World War.
So my most recent acquaintance with the word
exemplified itself as definition #3, as done by Napoleon to certain rare
miscreants in his Army of Italy. The earlier occurrence was definition #1,
tallied in a long and evil list of Nazi crimes by a grim and gritty
chain-smoking Western-reading pre-presidential Ike.
Mulct.
2 comments:
Used in a sentence. "Every year around this time, the government will mulct us of our hard-earned wealth."
Uncle
I floated that softball right down the middle for you to hit right out of the ball park!
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