greedful

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

greed +‎ -ful

Adjective[edit]

greedful (comparative more greedful, superlative most greedful)

  1. Characterized by greed; greedy.
    • 1975, William Herbert Sheldon, Prometheus revisited:
      In a society where it is important to get a (first panel surplus) advantage over other persons, the young man tends to surrender his individual ideals and to adopt instead, as a mask, the ideals and purposes and language and philosophy that make up a sort of common denominator for the "mafia" or predatory agglutination that is bound together in the greedful quest.
    • 2014, Anantanand Rambachan, A Hindu Theology of Liberation: Not-Two Is Not One, →ISBN, page 78:
      Freedom from greed unties the knot of greedful actions, but does not diminish our capacity to act.
    • 2015, Kate Elliott, Black Wolves, →ISBN:
      Nor would I wish to bind myself to a woman stained by greedful lust.