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See also: law, a See also: bill of See also: exchange
See also: drawn on a banker and signed by the drawer, requiring the banker to pay on demand a certain sum in See also: money to or to the See also: order of a specified See also: person or to See also: bearer
.
In this, its most See also: modern sense, the See also: cheque is the outcome of the growth of the banking See also: system of the 19th century
.
For details see See also: BANKS AND BANKING: Law, and BILL OF EXCHANGE
.
The word check,' of which " cheque " is a variant now general in See also: English usage, signified merely the counterfoil or indent of an See also: exchequer bill, or any draft See also: form of payment, on which was registered the particulars of the See also: principal See also: part, as a check to alteration or forgery
.
The
' The See also: original meaning of " check " is a move in the See also: game of See also: chess which directly attacks the See also: king; the word comes through the Old Fr. eschec, eschac, from the Med
.
See also: Lat. form scaccus of the Persian shah, king, i.e. the king in the game of chess; cf. the origin of " mate " from the Arabic shah-See also: mat, the king is dead
.
The word was early used in a transferred sense of a stoppage or rebuff, and so is applied to anything which stops or hinders a See also: matter in progress, or which controls or restrains anything, hence a token, ticket or counterfoil which serves as a means of See also: identification, &c.check or counterfoil parts remained in the hands of the banker, the portion given to the customer being termed a " drawn note " or " draft." From the beginning of the 19th century the word " cheque " gradually became synonymous with "draft " as meaning a written order on a banker by a person having money in the banker's hands, to pay some amount to bearer or to a person named
.
Ultimately, it entirely superseded the word " draft," and has now a statutory definition (Bills of Exchange See also: Act 1882, s
.
73)—" a bill of exchange drawn on a banker payable on demand." The word " draft " has come to have a wider meaning, that of a bill drawn by one person on another for a sum of money, or an order (whether on a banker or other) to pay money
.
The employment of cheques as a method of payment offering greater convenience than See also: coin is almost universal in See also: Great Britain and the See also: United States
.
Of the transactions through the banks of the United See also: Kingdom between 86 and 9o% are conducted by means of cheques, and an even higher proportion in the United States
.
On the continent of See also: Europe the use of cheques, formerly rare, is becoming more general, particularly in See also: France, and to some extent in See also: Germany
.
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