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Module 2: “How Bernard Madoff Did It” by Liaquat Ahamed

22 words 101 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. morbid
    suggesting an unhealthy mental state
    Ever since the Madoff scandal broke in December 2008, the public has been morbidly fascinated by the affair.
  2. swindle
    the act of cheating by some fraudulent scheme
    How had so ordinary a man pulled off the largest swindle in history?
  3. philanthropist
    someone who makes charitable donations
    And what a spectrum of the world: Jewish philanthropists from the Upper East Side; almost half the membership of the Palm Beach Country Club; rich South Americans; retired accountants living in Florida; the demimonde of Monaco; even, it was whispered, figures from the Russian mafia and the Colombian drug cartels.
  4. cartel
    a consortium formed to limit commercial competition
    And what a spectrum of the world: Jewish philanthropists from the Upper East Side; almost half the membership of the Palm Beach Country Club; rich South Americans; retired accountants living in Florida; the demimonde of Monaco; even, it was whispered, figures from the Russian mafia and the Colombian drug cartels.
  5. riveting
    capable of arousing and holding the attention
    “The Wizard of Lies,” by Diana B. Henriques, a senior financial writer for The New York Times, makes for riveting reading because it covers all these dimensions.
  6. offset
    compensate for or counterbalance
    How he generated these returns was always a mystery — he claimed to be offsetting the downside risks of his stock purchases by selectively using options to hedge the portfolio.
  7. mystique
    an aura of heightened interest surrounding a person or thing
    But the very secrecy added to his mystique.
  8. recoup
    regain or make up for
    At some point (no one is quite certain when; Madoff claims it was not until the early ’90s, while Henriques believes it to have been earlier), after losing money, rather than come clean to his clients, he fudged the numbers, hoping to recoup the losses later and get back on track.
  9. viability
    the capacity to be done in a practical and useful way
    Even a leveling off or a slight slowdown in the pace of money coming in can threaten the viability of the entire scam.
  10. recession
    a situation in which the state of the economy declines
    Henriques reveals how the operation came close to falling apart on several occasions, first after the stock market collapse of 1987, then again during the recession of the early 1990s, and yet again after the tech bubble burst in 2000.
  11. dupe
    fool or hoax
    Not everyone was duped.
  12. audit
    examine carefully for accuracy
    The accounting firm Madoff employed to audit his books was a one-man operation run from an office park in the New York suburbs; the volume of option trading entailed by the amount of money he was supposedly managing would have far exceeded the capacity of the derivatives market; and the returns he claimed to be generating were far too steady and reliable to be plausible.
  13. entail
    impose, involve, or imply as a necessary result
    The accounting firm Madoff employed to audit his books was a one-man operation run from an office park in the New York suburbs; the volume of option trading entailed by the amount of money he was supposedly managing would have far exceeded the capacity of the derivatives market; and the returns he claimed to be generating were far too steady and reliable to be plausible.
  14. derivative
    a financial instrument with value based on another security
    The accounting firm Madoff employed to audit his books was a one-man operation run from an office park in the New York suburbs; the volume of option trading entailed by the amount of money he was supposedly managing would have far exceeded the capacity of the derivatives market; and the returns he claimed to be generating were far too steady and reliable to be plausible.
  15. tantalizing
    arousing desire or expectation for something unattainable
    Henriques reveals how tantalizingly close the agency came time and again to uncovering the fraud.
  16. engross
    consume all of one's attention or time
    In the end the story holds us not because of the engrossing details of the scam, but because of its human dimension.
  17. harrowing
    causing extreme distress
    It is a harrowing scene.
  18. prostrate
    stretched out and lying at full length along the ground
    The other son, Andrew, “prostrate,” “slumps to the floor in tears”; at another point he wraps his arms around Madoff and tells him that what he has wrought upon them is “a father-­son betrayal of biblical proportions.”
  19. demonize
    characterize as dangerous or wicked
    But in Henriques’s telling, they were not among the criminals, and she concludes with an impassioned challenge to the way they have been subsequently demonized.
  20. hapless
    unfortunate and deserving pity
    Madoff emerges here not as some master criminal, but as a sad, hapless man who, lacking the character to tell the truth at the critical moment, stumbled foolishly and blindly into one of the crimes of the century.
  21. personification
    someone who represents an abstract quality
    He is less a personification of the crass greed that lay behind the recent bubble decade and more the embodiment of our infinite capacity for self-delusion.
  22. crass
    so unrefined as to be offensive or insensitive
    He is less a personification of the crass greed that lay behind the recent bubble decade and more the embodiment of our infinite capacity for self-delusion.
Created on Wed May 27 12:59:00 EDT 2020 (updated Mon Jun 01 10:23:57 EDT 2020)

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