cash advance

cash advance

A cash advance or cash advances is a service provided by most credit card & charge card issuers. The service allows card holders to withdraw cash / money, " bread " (an allusion to the importance of money), " dosh ", " dough ", " folding stuff ", " lolly ", big ones, smackaroonies, " lucre " / " filthy lucre ", " moola / moolah ", " readies ", greenbucks " spondulicks/spondoolic(k)s " and " wonga ". " Fiver " may be used for an Australian 5 dollar note, A British five-pound note, a Canadian five-dollar bill, a five-Euro banknote or a United States five-dollar bill. either through an ATM or over the counter at a bank or other financial agency, up to a certain limit. For a credit card, this will be the credit limit (or some percentage of it). Cash advances generally incur a fee (to replace the interchange fee normally charged to the merchant on a card transaction), although this is sometimes waived if the account is in credit. When made on a credit card, they are usually charged at a higher rate of interest than store purchases, & generally do not attract an interest-free period which is customarily given to cardholders who pay off their bill in full every month. Under card scheme rules, a credit card holder presenting an accepted form of identification must be issued a cash advance or cash advances over the counter at any bank which issues that type of credit card, even if the cardholder cannot give his or her P I N number.


cash advance 

 

 

cash advance

 

 

 

 

cash advances


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Quid (singular and plural) is used for pound sterling or £, in British slang. It is thought to derive from the Latin phrase "quid pro quo". A pound (£1) may also be referred to as a "nicker" or "nugget" (rarer). In Ireland quid was used for the Irish Punt and is now used for the Euro (€) and previously it was also used in Australia for the Australian pound.

Some other pre-decimalisation United Kingdom coins or denominations became commonly known by colloquial and slang terms, perhaps the most well known being "bob" for a shilling, and "quid" for a pound. A farthing was a "mag", a silver threepence was a "joey" and the later nickel-brass threepence was called a "threepenny bit" (pronounced /?r?pni/, /?r?pni/ or /?r?pni/ bit); a sixpence was a "tanner", the two-shilling coin or florin was a "two-bob bit", and the two shillings and sixpence coin or half-crown was a "half dollar". Slang terms are not used for the decimal coins that replaced them but in some parts of the country, "bob" continues to represent one-twentieth of a pound, that is five new pence, and two bob is 10p. For all denominations "p" is used for pence.

In the United Kingdom the term "shrapnel" may be used for an inconvenient pocketful of loose change because of the association with a shrapnel shell and "wad" or "wedge" for a bundle of banknotes, with "tightwad" a derogatory term for someone who is reluctant to spend money. Quantities of UK 1p and 2p coins may be referred to as "Copper", 5p, 10p, 20p, and 50p coins as "Silver" and £1 and £2 coins as "Bronze" due to their colour and apparent base metal type. "Brass" is northern English slang for any amount of money.

Rhyming Slang for particular quantities of money in the United Kingdom include; "Lady Godiva" for a fiver (£5), or a "Jacks" - Jacks Alive (extremely rare). A "Cockle" is £10 - Cock and Hen - ten. A "Tenner" is £10. A "score" is £20. A "pony" equals £25. A "ton" or "century" is £100. A "monkey" is £500. A "grand" commonly means £1,000 and use of this term is now very widespread. A "oner" (one-er) has referred to various amounts from one shilling to a pound to now meaning £100 or £1,000.

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US banknote nicknames reflect their values (such as five, twenty, etc.), the subjects depicted on them and their colour. The $5 bill has been referred to as a "fin" or a "fiver" or a "five-spot;" the $10 bill as a "sawbuck," a "ten-spot," or a "Hamilton"; the $20 bill as a "double sawbuck," or a "Jackson"; the $1 bill is sometimes called a "single," or a "buck," the $2 bill a "deuce," "Jefferson," or a "T.J." and the $100 bill is nicknamed a "Benjamin," "Benji," or "Franklin" (after Benjamin Franklin, who is pictured on the note), C-note (C being the Roman numeral for 100), Century Note, or "bill" ("two bills" being $200, etc.). The dollar has also been referred to as a "bone" or "bones" (i.e. twenty bones is equal to $20) or a "bean". Occasionally these will be referred to as "dead presidents," although neither Hamilton ($10) nor Franklin ($100) was President. $1000 notes are occasionally referred to as 'large' in banking ("twenty large" being $20,000, etc.) or as "big ones" in slang (as in "twenty big ones"). The newer designs are sometimes referred to as "Bigface" bills, or "Monopoly Money". Greenback originally applied specifically to the 19th century Demand Note dollars created by Abraham Lincoln to finance the costs of the American Civil War for the North. The original note was printed in black and green on the back side. It is still used to refer to the U.S. dollar (but not to the dollars of other countries).

For coins a "nickel" is a coin worth one twentieth of a U.S. Dollar. A "dime" is a coin worth one tenth of a U.S. Dollar or Canadian Dollar and a "quarter" is a coin worth one quarter of a U.S. Dollar or Canadian Dollar.


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