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Pawn   /pɔn/   Listen
Pawn

noun
1.
An article deposited as security.
2.
A person used by another to gain an end.  Synonyms: cat's-paw, instrument.
3.
(chess) the least powerful piece; moves only forward and captures only to the side; it can be promoted to a more powerful piece if it reaches the 8th rank.
4.
Borrowing and leaving an article as security for repayment of the loan.
verb
(past & past part. pawned; pres. part. pawning)
1.
Leave as a guarantee in return for money.  Synonyms: hock, soak.



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"Pawn" Quotes from Famous Books



... Norman noble, thou pawn-broking slave," answered Front-de-Boeuf; "the faith of a Norman nobleman, more pure than the gold and silver of thee and all ...
— Ivanhoe - A Romance • Walter Scott

... seemed to me a shame for a man like you to be a pawn in a game all of his life while he might be playing the ...
— Under Handicap - A Novel • Jackson Gregory

... never very placid, was now severely tried, both by gout and by calumny. The courtiers had adopted a mode of warfare, which was soon turned with far more formidable effect against themselves. Half the inhabitants of the Grub Street garrets paid their milk scores, and got their shirts out of pawn, by abusing Pitt. His German war, his subsidies, his pension, his wife's peerage, were shin of beef and gin, blankets and baskets of small coal, to the starving poetasters of the Fleet. Even in the House of Commons, he was, on one occasion during this session, ...
— Critical and Historical Essays, Volume III (of 3) • Thomas Babington Macaulay

... regarded more in the light of a business transaction than it is with us, and less as one which it is necessary to conceal from the eyes of the world at large. Nothing is more common than for the owner of a large wardrobe of furs to pawn them one and all at the beginning of summer and to leave them there until the beginning of the next winter. The pawnbrokers in their own interest take the greatest care of all pledges, which, if not redeemed, will become their own property, though they repudiate all claims for damage done ...
— Chinese Sketches • Herbert A. Giles

... clouded. She had put forward a little pawn of compliment toward us, as towards a good point, perhaps, for tempting a break in the game. And behold! Rosamond's knight only leaped right over it, facing honestly ...
— We Girls: A Home Story • Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney


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