- Allonge to a bill of exchange
- ملحق كمبيالة، امتداد كمبيالة
English-Arabic economic glossary.
English-Arabic economic glossary.
Allonge — (from French allonger , to draw out ), a slip of paper affixed to a negotiable instrument, as a bill of exchange, for the purpose of receiving additional endorsements for which there may not be sufficient space on the bill itself. An endorsement… … Wikipedia
Allonge — Al*longe , n. [F. allonge, earlier alonge, a lengthening. See {Allonge}, v., and cf. {Lunge}.] 1. (Fencing) A thrust or pass; a lunge. [1913 Webster] 2. A slip of paper attached to a bill of exchange for receiving indorsements, when the back of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
allonge — al·longe /ə länj, a lȯ zh/ n [French, literally, something that lengthens, from Old French alonge, from alongier to make long, ultimately from Latin longus long]: a paper attached to an instrument to provide space for additional endorsements:… … Law dictionary
Allonge — A sheet of paper attached to a bill of exchange for the purpose of documenting endorsements. The need for an allonge arises as a result of a lack of space on the bill itself. Because a bill of exchange is transferable through endorsement, it may… … Investment dictionary
allonge — An attachment to a bill of exchange to provide space for further endorsements when the back of the bill itself has been fully used. With the decline in the use of bills of exchange it is now rarely needed … Big dictionary of business and management
allonge — /əˈlɒndʒ/ (say uh lonj) noun a slip of paper attached to a bill of exchange to take further endorsements. {French: lengthening} …
allonge — n. Commerce, slip of paper attached to bill of exchange for additional endorsements … Dictionary of difficult words
allonge — /æ lɒnʒ/ noun a piece of paper attached to a bill of exchange, so that more endorsements can be written on it … Dictionary of banking and finance
allonge — aˈlōⁿzh noun (plural allonges zhə̇z) Etymology: French, literally, lengthening, from Old French alonge, from alongier to make long, from (assumed) Vulgar Latin allongare, from Latin ad + Late Latin … Useful english dictionary
Negotiable instrument — A negotiable instrument is a document guaranteeing the payment of a specific amount of money, either on demand, or at a set time. According to the Section 13 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 in India, a negotiable instrument means a… … Wikipedia
Cheque — A Canadian cheque … Wikipedia