(cheque drawn)

  • 51Bank — For other uses, see Bank (disambiguation). Banker and Bankers redirect here. For other uses, see Banker (disambiguation). Banking …

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  • 52Demand draft — A demand draft A demand draft, also known as a remotely created check, a tele check, or check by phone, check by fax or echeck, is a check created by a merchant with a buyer s checking account number on it, but without the buyer s original… …

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  • 53draw — 1 verb past tense drew, past participle drawn PICTURE/DESCRIPTION 1 WITH PENCIL (I, T) to make a picture of something with a pencil or pen: Can I draw your portrait? | I ve never been able to draw well. | draw sb sth/draw sth for sb: Hans drew… …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 54Non-sufficient funds — (NSF) is a term used in the banking industry to indicate that a demand for payment (a cheque) cannot be honored because insufficient funds are available in the account on which the instrument was drawn. In simplified terms, a cheque has been… …

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  • 55Crossing of cheques — A crossed cheque – the oblique nearly vertical lines down the center are the cross. Any cheque crossed with two parallel lines means that the cheque can only be deposited directly into an account with a bank and cannot be immediately cashed by a… …

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  • 56cashier's check — noun a check issued by the officer of a bank on the banks own account (not that of a private person) cashier s checks are as good as cash • Syn: ↑treasurer s check, ↑cashier s cheque, ↑treasurer s cheque • Hypernyms: ↑check, ↑bank check, ↑ …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 57draw — v. & n. v. (past drew; past part. drawn) 1 tr. pull or cause to move towards or after one. 2 tr. pull (a thing) up, over, or across. 3 tr. pull (curtains etc.) open or shut. 4 tr. take (a person) aside, esp. to talk to. 5 tr. attract; bring to… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 58Mystery shopping — Marketing Key concepts Product marketing · Pricing …

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  • 59Negotiable cow — The negotiable cow is the common name of a fictitous legal case known as Board of Inland Revenue v Haddock (heard jointly with R v Haddock ) written by the humourist A. P. Herbert for Punch magazine as part of his series of Misleading Cases in… …

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  • 60Board of Inland Revenue v Haddock — The case of the negotiable cow, collected in Uncommon Law Board of Inland Revenue v Haddock (also known as the negotiable cow ) is a fictitious legal case written by the humorist A. P. Herbert for Punch magazine as part of his series of… …

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