hundred-thousandaire

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English

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Etymology

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From hundred thousand +‎ -aire.

Noun

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hundred-thousandaire (plural hundred-thousandaires)

  1. A person whose net worth is at or greater than one hundred thousand units of the local currency.
    • 1921 July, Arthur Jerome Eddy, “Introduction”, in Property, Chicago, Ill.: A[lexander] C[aldwell] McClurg & Co., →OCLC, page 12:
      The “swollen fortune” is a fact in our economic development. There may be but one billionaire but there are any number of millionares, thousands of hundred-thousandaires and hundreds of thousands ten-thousandaires. From the point of view of the man who has nothing, an American farmer with ten thousand has a “swollen fortune,” and it is swollen far beyond the farmer’s pro rata share of the country’s wealth. The “swollen fortune” is not a thing of absolute magnitude, but entirely a matter of comparative size.
    • 1924 April 12, Albert W[illiam] Atwood, “What Is Taxation For?”, in George Horace Lorimer, editor, The Saturday Evening Post, volume 196, number 41, Philadelphia, Pa.: The Curtis Publishing Company, →ISSN, section “Useful Rich Men”, page 170, column 3:
      Seriously speaking, it is a very real question whether social discontent can be allayed by heavy taxes on large fortunes and incomes. Millionaires are a fact, and far from a wholly pleasing one; but how about the hundred-thousandaires and the hundreds of thousands of ten-thousandaires? To the migratory laborer with fifty dollars, or the wobbly with no dollars, there is just as much injustice in a skilled workman having two thousand dollars invested in a house or a savings bank as there is in a manufacturer having one million.
    • 1999, Curtis Pesmen, “The Millionaires Club: An Inside Look”, in When a Man Turns Forty: The Ultimate Midlife Manual; Unconventional Wisdom and Sound Advice from Those Who Have Been There and Thrived, Emmaus, Pa.: Rodale Press, Inc., →ISBN, page 199:
      And so, while waiting for my windfall, I decided to turn to a few men who already had passed the million mark by 40. I was curious about their strategies, spending habits, family lives, and frustrations. And I wanted to know what they did for fun. I wasn’t looking for a financial blueprint; I was in search of a few lessons that I and other “hundred-thousandaires” might appreciate.
    • 2003, Allan Gould, “[Adopt-a-Child, United States; Adopt-a-Child, Canada] American Children Need Your Help”, in G.I. Joe or Anne of Green Gables? Friendly Fire between Canada and the States, Toronto, Ont.: ECW Press, →ISBN, part 7 (Fun and Games), page 173:
      Worst of all, countless millions of American children suffer from insecure financial futures and hear their parents crying out in their sleep from hideous nightmares because of the horrific collapse of the Internet stocks in April 2000 and after. So many billionaires became only millionaires. So many millionaires dropped to only hundred-thousandaires overnight.
    • 2014 December 8, Alexander “A.J.” Johnson, chapter 19, in Keeper of the Code (A Buckhead Tyrone Mystery; 1), Bloomington, Ind.: Archway Publishing, →ISBN, part II (Then), page 190:
      The base level of membership, an unspoken junior status, was accorded to those journeymen who labored in white-shoe law firms or in the outer fringes of the C-suite, bound to their jobs by the golden handcuffs of the hundred-thousandaires.
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