It’s time for your lessons boys and girls. Tonight’s words are `principal` and `principle`. A simple exercise follows the definition for each word. It is my hopes that people, err, my pupils will see the difference in spelling and remember the meanings behind these two words in context:
12. Finance. a capital sum, as distinguished from interest or profit.
Example: A principal loan amount could be a few pennies or range in the hundreds, thousands, millions, billions or even trillions! There would be NO banksters without their pals. Hence, an unpaid principal loan is NOT your pal; and therefore, the banksters are your enemies!
1. an accepted or professed rule of action or conduct: a person of good moral principles.
Example: A principle trait in a lender is said to possess a sixth sense and great patience. Without great strength and forbearance, the lender would end up pulling the `trigger` out of anger after many years of frustration for unpaid principal loans.
Now that you have learned the difference between greed and a higher path and between hatred and self-control, I want you, my dear pupils, to understand that principal loans should only be made if the borrower is of good moral principles. That is how good business models ought to be man-handled to avoid jail time or to reach freedom, respectively.
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