soixante-cinq
After 1 day, you would have 2 pounds. After 2 days, you would have 4 pounds. After 3 days, you would have 8 pounds. After 4 days, you would have 16 pounds. After 5 days, you would have 32 pounds. After 6 days, you would have 64 pounds. After 7 days, you would have 128 pounds. After 8 days, you would have 256 pounds. After 9 days, you would have 512 pounds. After 10 days, you would have 1.024 pounds. After 11 days, you would have 2.048 pounds. After 12 days, you would have 4.096 pounds. After 13 days, you would have 8.192 pounds. After 14 days, you would have 16.384 pounds. After 15 days, you would have 32.768 pounds. After 16 days, you would have 65.536 pounds. After 17 days, you would have 131.072 pounds. After 18 days, you would have 262.144 pounds. After 19 days, you would have 524.288 pounds. After 20 days, you would have 1.048.576 pounds. So you would have 1 million pounds after 20 days. If you would get the money exponentially (not double it on a certain point on the day, but just continuing to grow all day), then it would take you log(2,1.000.000)=19,931568... days. So the answer is 19,931 or 20 days.
As a wild guess, I would say 34 pounds!As a wild guess, I would say 34 pounds!As a wild guess, I would say 34 pounds!As a wild guess, I would say 34 pounds!
This would be 196 pounds.
There are 16 oz per pound. Two pounds would be 32 oz. 24 oz would be 1.5 pounds.
forty-nine pounds
Yes - If you have your bank passbook and cheque book (or just the cheque book) you can withdraw money from any branch of SBI. If you don't have these, then the bank would not accept your request for money withdrawal. If you have only your passbook, you can try but the bank is mandated to accept your request.
Paris in France uses the Euro, so pounds would not be accepted.
In modern banking practices, a cheque is not considered legal tender. Legal tender refers to a form of payment that must be accepted to fulfill a debt, such as cash or coins issued by the government. However, a bank may accept a cheque for the amount specified, subject to their own policies and procedures for processing cheque payments. The acceptance of a cheque for 100 guineas would ultimately depend on the specific bank's policies regarding cheque deposits and payments.
Basically, a cheque is a written promise to pay the receiver the sum on the cheque. For example, if a workman has finished work on your property, you would write a cheque to allow the workman to put the cheque into his bank account, and the amount would be taken out of your account. It is important to ensure the amount on the cheque is in your account, otherwise the cheque would be returned (a bounced cheque).
I would write on a British cheque, forty-five thousand pounds (or dollars, depending on the your country).
No. A cheque is a non-negotiable monetary instrument. The value of the cheque cannot be modified or negotiated and hence the term non-negotiable. The amount filled up by the cheque issuer is the value of the cheque and it would not change.
A "cheque bounce" occurs when a person writes out a cheque, but there are not enough funds in his bank account to clear that cheque. Here's how it works: When you write a cheque, you are instructing your bank to move a certain amount of money from your bank account to someone else. The bank cannot move that kind of money if you do not have sufficient balance in your account. The bank returns the cheque to the person with the word "bounced" beside it. Cheque bouncing can incur any number of penalties, not to mention damaging your credit and even leading to litigation if bounced too often. Ensure you've got sufficient in your account so as not to bounce!
Yes. The term used for this is called Cheque "Stop Payment" You must visit the bank branch from which you got the cheque book and submit a letter stating the reason for the same and also provide the cheque number. If the cheque has not yet been paid, the cheque would be canceled and no payment would be made.
the entry for Cheque dishonor would be Party A\c dr To Bank A\c
Yes, if you still have OD limit and No, if you have exhausted your OD limit. Let us say your OD limit is $10,000 and you have used $7,000 and you have given a cheque for $2000, then your cheque would be cashed. If you have used $9,800 and given a cheque for $2000 your cheque would be rejected.
Say Jack has a cheque from Bob, and Jack wants to pay walmart with that cheque...that would be a 3rd party check. Essentially it would be a cheque you are using (with the permission of who ever owns the cheque) to pay someone, so the owner of the cheque would be the 3rd party since they are outside of the acutal transaction betwen you and who ever you are paying. Hardly anywhere will accept a third party check because of the high risk of fraud. ---- If somebody gives you a check, and you turn it over and write "pay to the order of ____" in order to give it to a third party, that makes it a third party check. An example would be using your paycheck to pay for your groceries.