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check
(redirected from checks through)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Financial, Idioms, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.
check or cheque, bill of exchange (see draft draft, in banking, order by one party to another party to pay a stated sum to the person or firm in whose favor the draft is made. It is similar in form to the ordinary bank check . Often the drawer and the drawee of a draft are the same person.
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) drawn upon a bank or trust company or broker connected with a clearinghouse (see clearing clearing, in banking, the periodic settling of bankers' claims against each other, for which local banks establish clearinghouse associations. Clearinghouses are said to have existed in Florence by A.D. 800.
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). Upon presentation of a check, the bank or other drawee pays cash to the bearer or to a specified person. Payment is made from those funds of the maker or drawer that are in a primary demand deposit account (checking account) with the drawee. The check is intended for prompt presentation, rather than for use as a continuing currency. When the check is presented, the drawee pays the designated sum to the holder and cancels the check, which is then returned to the drawer as his receipt. To prevent fraud, checks are usually of tinted paper and are filled in with ink; the figures may be punched out of the paper or embossed. Many checks also have identifying code numbers that have been printed with magnetically active ink. The numbers enable banks to clear checks mechanically and thereby speed up operations. Whether or not the check will be paid by the bank depends upon its recognition of the drawer's signature and upon the bank's confidence in the person presenting the check for payment. A bank becomes primarily liable for payment only when it "certifies" on a check that the necessary funds are in the bank to the credit of the drawer. However, a bank is usually responsible to its depositor for paying forged checks. All local checks accepted by a bank are turned over daily to a clearinghouse, which cancels checks due from and to all banks of a given neighborhood, the balances alone being paid in cash. Banks settle out-of-town checking claims by means of entries made in the books of the appropriate Federal Reserve banks. Checks were probably used in Italy in the 15th cent. and in Holland in the 16th, from where their use spread to England and the American colonies in the 17th cent. Their rise to first place as a medium of exchange in industrialized nations took place in the 19th cent., their importance varying with differences in banking facilities, the density of population, and commercial activity. About 90% of all transactions in the United States are said to be effected by checks.

check

Bill of exchange drawn on a bank and payable on demand. Checks have become the chief form of money in the domestic commerce of developed countries. As a written order to pay money, a check may be transferred from one person to another by endorsement. Most checks are not paid in currency but by the debiting and crediting of bank deposits. There are several special forms of checks. A cashier's check is issued by a bank and has unquestioned acceptability, as does a certified check, which is a depositor's check that has been guaranteed by a bank. Traveler's checks are cashier's checks sold to travelers, which must be signed twice by the payee, once when the check is issued and once when it is cashed; reimbursement is guaranteed if they are lost or stolen.


check
1. 
a. fabric with a pattern of squares or crossed lines
b. (as modifier): a check suit
2. Chess the state or position of a king under direct attack, from which it must be moved or protected by another piece
3. part of the action of a piano that arrests the backward motion of a hammer after it has struck a string and holds it until the key is released
4. a chip or counter used in some card and gambling games
5. Hunting a pause by the hounds in the pursuit of their quarry owing to loss of its scent
6. Angling a ratchet fitted to a fishing reel to check the free running of the line
7. Ice hockey the act of impeding an opponent with one's body or stick

check [chek]
(computer science)
A test which is necessary to detect a mistake in computer programming or a computer malfunction.
(engineering)
A device attached to something in order to limit the movement, such as a door check.
(materials)
A lengthwise crack in a board.
(metallurgy)
A minute crack occurring in steel that has been cooled too quickly.


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Service-fee recovery - Service fee recovery service is a consumer-friendly way for retailers to more effectively collect service fees on returned checks through Solutran's Double PostCard Service.
 
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