[
US
/ˈtʃɛk/
]
[ UK /tʃˈɛk/ ]
[ UK /tʃˈɛk/ ]
NOUN
-
a written order directing a bank to pay money
he paid all his bills by check
VERB
- withdraw money by writing a check
How To Use cheque In A Sentence
- Have you got any ID? A driving licence or cheque card will do.
- Very wealthy people don't like to be questioned about whether they can support a cheque. Times, Sunday Times
- The war-time legacy of the five-shilling legal maximum on restaurant bills was an open cheque for profiteers to pose as restaurateurs.
- And here ... sign this blank cheque for what you owe.
- You can then pay bills immediately, using a separate chequebook, even if it means that you slip into the red.
- The Chancellor of the Exchequer appears to have carried the Cabinet in his opposition to such a step.
- There will be a representative from Crumlin Hospital attending the function to accept the cheque.
- He perceived they were entering the great theatre of his first appearance, the great theatre he had last seen as a chequer-work of glare and blackness in his flight from the red police. When the Sleeper Wakes
- Is it OK if I post you the cheque next week?
- His personal life has been chequered. Times, Sunday Times