Bank Definition–noun | 1. | a long pile or heap; mass: a bank of earth; a bank of clouds. | | 3. | Phy
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sical Geography. the slope immediately bordering a stream course along which the water normally runs. | | 4. | a broad elevation of the sea floor around which the water is relatively shallow but not a hazard to surface navigation. | | 5. | Coal Mining. the surface around the mouth of a shaft. | | 7. | Aeronautics. the lateral inclination of an aircraft, esp. during a turn. | | 8. | Billiards, Pool. the cushion of the table. | –verb (used with object) | 9. | to border with or like a bank; embank: banking the river with sandbags at flood stage. | | 10. | to form into a bank or heap (usually fol. by up): to bank up the snow. | | 11. | to build (a road or railroad track) with an upward slope from the inner edge to the outer edge at a curve. | | 12. | Aeronautics. to tip or incline (an airplane) laterally. | | 13. | Billiards, Pool. | a. | to drive (a ball) to the cushion. | | b. | to pocket (the object ball) by driving it against the bank. | | | 14. | to cover (a fire) with ashes or fuel to make it burn long and slowly. | –verb (used without object) | 15. | to build up in or form banks, as clouds or snow. | | 16. | Aeronautics. to tip or incline an airplane laterally. | | 17. | Horology. (of a l
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ever or balance) to be halted at either end of its oscillation by striking a pin or the like. | | 18. | (of a road or railroad track) to slope upward from the inner edge to the outer edge at a curve. | | From Dictionary
Check Definition–verb (used with object) | 1. | to stop or arrest the motion of suddenly or forcibly: He checked the horse at the edge of the cliff. | | 2. | to restrain; hold in restraint or control: They built a high wall to check the tides. | | 3. | to cause a reduction, as in rate or intensity; diminish: The new measures checked the rapidity with which the epidemic was spreading. | | 4. | to investigate or verify as to correctness: She checked the copy against the original. | | 5. | to make an inquiry into, search through, etc.: We checked the files, but the letter was missing. | | 6. | to inspect or test the performance, condition, safety, etc., of (something): Check a used car thoroughly before buying it. | | 7. | to mark (something) so as to indicate examination, correctness, preference, etc. (often fol. by off): Please check the correct answer. They checked off the names of people they wanted to invite. | | 8. | to leave in temporary custody: Check your umbrellas at the door. | | 9. | to accept for temporary custody: We accept responsibility for any article we check here. | | 10. | to send (baggage) on a passenger's ticket, usually on the same carrier used by the passenger, for pickup at the destination: We checked two trunks through to Portland. | | 11. | to accept (baggage) for conveyance, and to convey, under the privilege of a passenger's ticket: Check this trunk to Portland. | | 12. | to mark with or in a pattern of squares: to check fabric. | | 13. | Agriculture. to plant in checkrows. | | 14. | Chess. to place (an opponent's king) under direct attack. | | 15. | Ice Hockey. to obstruct or impede the movement or progress of (an opponent). Compare back-check, fore-check. | –verb (used without object) | 16. | to prove to be right; correspond accurately: The reprint checks with the original, item for item. | | 17. | to make an inquiry, investigation, etc., as for verification (often fol. by up, into, etc.): He checked to make sure his answer was correct. Check into the matter. | | 18. | to make a sudden stop; pause: The horse checked before he jumped. | | 19. | Chess. to make a move that puts the opponent's king under direct attack. | | 20. | to crack or split, usually in small checks: Painted surfaces may check with age. | | 21. | Poker. to decline to initiate the betting in a betting round, usually to force another player to make the first bet rather than raise it. | | 22. | Hunting. (of hounds) to stop, esp. because the line of scent has been lost. | | 23. | Falconry. (of a hawk) to forsake the proper prey and follow baser game (fol. by at). | –noun | 24. | Also, British, cheque. Banking. a written order, usually on a standard printed form, directing a bank to pay money. | | 25. |
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a slip or ticket showing the amount owed, esp. a bill for food or beverages consumed. | | 26. | a ticket or token that when matched with a counterpart identifies an article left in the temporary custody of another, the purchaser of a ticket, a person who is to be served next, etc. | | 27. | a criterion, standard, or means to insure against error, fraud, etc.: This handmade sample is a check that the machine-made samples have to match. | | 28. | an inquiry, search, or examination: We made a quick check but found nothing missing. | | 29. | Also called check mark. a mark, often indicated by ( ), as on a list, to indicate that something has been considered, acted upon, or approved. | | 30. | a person or thing that stops, limits, slows, or restrains: The increase of duty was an effective check on imports. He was a check on her enthusiasm. | <
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td class="dnindex">31. | a sudden arrest or stoppage; repulse; rebuff: Taxation caused a check in the accumulation of vast fortunes. | | 32. | a control, test, or inspection that ascertains performance or prevents error: They ran a check on the dependability of the automobile. | | 33. | a pattern formed of squares, as on a checkerboard. | | 34. | one of the squares in such a pattern. | | 35. | a fabric having a check pattern. | | 36. | Chess. the exposure of the king to direct attack: The king was in check. | | 38. | a counter used in card games, as the chip in poker. | | 39. | a small crack: There were several checks in the paint. | | 40. | an egg, designated for market, having a slightly cracked shell and an intact inner membrane. | | 41. | Masonry. a rabbet-shaped cutting on the edge of a stone, by which it is fitted to another stone. | | 42. | Hunting. | a. | the losing of the scent by a dog or pack. | | b. | (in fox hunting) a period in a hunt, following the losing of the scent by the hounds, during which the field rests quietly while the hounds cast to regain the scent. | | –adjective | 43. | serving to check, control, verify, etc.: a check system. | | 44. | ornamented with a checkered pattern; checkered: a check border. | –interjection | 45. | Chess. (used as a call to warn one's opponent that his or her king is exposed to direct attack, having just one move in which to escape or parry.) | | 46. | Informal. all right! agreed! | —Verb phrases | 47. | check in, to register, as at a hotel; indicate one's arrival or presence at a place, function, etc., usually by signing an appropriate form: We checked in at the reception desk. | | 48. | check on or up on, to investigate, scrutinize, or inspect: Don't forget to check on his work. We have to check up on him. | | 49. | check out, | a. | to vacate and pay for one's quarters at a hotel. | | b. | to verify or become verified; examine or investigate. | | c. | to fulfill requirements, as by passing a test: The engine checked out and we proceeded on our way. | | d. | to itemize, total the cost of, and collect payment for (a purchase): The supermarket cashier was exhausted from checking out groceries all day long. | | e. | to have the cost added up and pay for merchandise. | | f. | to borrow (an item) by having it listed as one's temporary responsibility: The adding machine was checked out in your name. | | g. | Informal. to depart quickly or abruptly; leave in a hurry. |
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| | 50. | check over, to examine or investigate, esp. thoroughly. | —Idioms | 51. | check the helm, Nautical. to alter the helm of a turning vessel to keep the bow from swinging too far or too rapidly. | | 52. | in check, under restraint: He held his anger in check. | | From Dictionary
Related topics from Britannicacheck bill of exchange drawn on a bank and payable on demand; it has become the chief form of money in the domestic commerce of developed countries. As a written order to pay money, it may be transferred ...
development bank national or regional financial institution designed to provide medium- and long-term capital for productive investment, often accompanied by technical assistance, in poor countries.central bank institution, such as the Bank of England, the U.S. Federal Reserve System, or the Bank of Japan, that is charged with regulating the size of a nation's money supply, the availability and cost of ...
bank The development of trade and commerce drove the need for readily exchangeable forms of money. The concept of bank money originated with the Amsterdamsche Wisselbank (the Bank of Amsterdam), which was ...
money In addition to currency, bank deposits are counted as part of the money holdings of the public. In the 19th century most economists regarded only currency and coin, including gold and other metals, ...
Federal Reserve System central banking authority of the United States. It acts as a fiscal agent for the U.S. government, is custodian of the reserve accounts of commercial banks, makes loans to commercial banks, and ...
Mansfield, William Murray, 1st Earl of, As must be the case with any court in central position, politics followed Mansfield to the bench. Three cases reveal his characteristic aloofness from personal or popular prejudices in rendering ...
perception in humans, the process whereby sensory stimulation is translated into organized experience. That experience, or percept, is the joint product of the stimulation and of the process itself. Relations ...
bank In most industrialized nations the supply of bank reserves is mainly regulated by means of central bank sales and purchases of government securities, foreign exchange, and other assets in secondary ...
credit, letter of order from a bank to a bank or other party abroad authorizing payment of money (up to a specified limit) to a person named in the letter. A letter of credit, unlike a bill of exchange (q.v.), is not ...
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