7 adjectives to describe blackmail

George Douglas Howard Cole & Raymond W. Postgate (A); 16Mar67; R406362. Double blackmail.

He chucked in a little blackmail about sicking his mates on to murder us if we didn't come across, and I tell you we fairly love him!

But remember that if your demands are too preposterous I will not for a moment listen to them, and that I am the last man in the world to submit to persistent and unwarrantable blackmail. 'I am, sir, 'Yours truly, 'Francis Smethurst.'

"Just this," retorted Lillian, "that I'm going to spring the nicest little case of polite blackmail on Grace Draper before the day is over that you ever saw.

The threat was intended to coerce the arbiters of the treaty terms by menacing the success of the plan to establish a League of Nationsto use an ugly word, it was a species of "blackmail" not unknown to international relations in the past.

'Twas a sensible way to avoid trouble, and I for one would rather pay a modest blackmail every month or two than run the risk of losing a good ship and a twelve-month's cargo.

Subsequently, one gathers, he took to chronic alcoholism, combined with amateur blackmail; and a final appearance shows the fellow dribbling wine over the evening shirt, to whose wear the author is at pains to tell us he was unused.

7 adjectives to describe  blackmail