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Deutsche Mammon {m} Synonyme

Asche  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂBares  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂBimbes  (umgangssprachlich)  Âfinanzielle  Mittel  ÂGeld  ÂHeu  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂKies  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂKnete  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂKohle  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂKröten  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂMammon  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂMäuse  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂMoneten  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂMoos  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂPiepen  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂPulver  (umgangssprach  
mammon  affluence  and pence  assets  bottomless purse  bulging purse  cash  circulating medium  coinage  coined liberty  

Englische mammon Synonyme

mammon  affluence  and pence  assets  bottomless purse  bulging purse  cash  circulating medium  coinage  coined liberty  cold cash  currency  dollars  easy circumstances  embarras de richesses  emergency money  filthy lucre  fortune  fractional currency  gold  handsome fortune  hard cash  hard currency  high income  high tax bracket  independence  legal tender  lucre  luxuriousness  managed currency  material wealth  medium of exchange  mintage  money  money to burn  moneybags  necessity money  opulence  opulency  pelf  possessions  postage currency  postal currency  pounds  property  prosperity  prosperousness  riches  richness  scrip  shillings  silver  six-figure income  soft currency  specie  sterling  substance  the almighty dollar  the wherewith  the wherewithal  treasure  upper bracket  wealth  wealthiness  

mammon Definition

Mammon
(n.) Riches

mammon Bedeutung

Mammon (New Testament) a personification of wealth and avarice as an evil spirit, ye cannot serve God and Mammon
mammon wealth regarded as an evil influence
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Mammon ?mæm?n in the New Testament of the Bible is commonly thought to mean money, material wealth, or any entity that promises wealth, and is associated with the greedy pursuit of gain. "You cannot serve both God and mammon." In the Middle Ages it was often personified as a deity and sometimes included in the seven princes of Hell. However, modern researchers claim Jesus was merely referring to Caesar as mammon, god of money, because it was Caesar who claimed to be a god - on the tax coin - the god of money.