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  2. How To Read a Pay Stub - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/read-pay-stub-193928053.html

    A pay stub contains all your income information, so it’s a great tool for tracking your salary, the taxes you’ve paid, insurance premium amounts, bonus information and vacation and overtime pay.

  3. Paycheck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paycheck

    A salary statement, commonly called a payslip, pay stub, paystub, pay advice, or sometimes paycheck stub or wage slip, is a document received by an employee that either includes a notice that the direct deposit transaction has gone through or that is attached to the paycheck.

  4. Cheque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheque

    A page in a chequebook may consist of both the cheque itself and a stub or counterfoil – when the cheque is written, only the cheque itself is detached, and the stub is retained in the chequebook as a record of the cheque. Alternatively, cheques may be recorded with carbon paper behind each cheque, in ledger sheets between cheques or at the ...

  5. Check stubs, fake receipts, blind loyalty: Cohen offers ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/michael-cohen-face-bruising...

    Instead, his testimony about purposefully mislabeled checks, false receipts and blind loyalty, however dry it was, placed Trump at the center of the scheme and underscored the foundational ...

  6. Substitute checks in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substitute_checks_in_the...

    A substitute check (also called an Image Replacement Document or IRD) [1] is a negotiable instrument that is a digital reproduction of an original paper check. As a negotiable payment instrument in the United States, a substitute check maintains the status of a "legal check" in lieu of the original paper check, as authorized by the Check ...

  7. Ticket (admission) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ticket_(admission)

    A ticket is a voucher that indicates that an individual is entitled to admission to an event or establishment such as a theatre, amusement park, stadium, or tourist attraction, or has a right to travel on a vehicle, such as with an airline ticket, bus ticket or train ticket. An individual typically pays for a ticket, but it may be free of charge.

  8. Security printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_printing

    Security printing is the field of the printing industry that deals with the printing of items such as banknotes, cheques, passports, tamper-evident labels, security tapes, product authentication, stock certificates, postage stamps and identity cards.

  9. Bureau of Engraving and Printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bureau_of_Engraving_and...

    The Bureau of Engraving and Printing ( BEP) is a government agency within the United States Department of the Treasury that designs and produces a variety of security products for the United States government, most notable of which is Federal Reserve Notes (paper money) for the Federal Reserve, the nation's central bank.

  10. Ephemera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ephemera

    The word is both plural and singular. [2] One definition for ephemera is "the minor transient documents of everyday life". [3] [4] Ephemera are often paper-based, printed items, including menus, ticket stubs, newspapers, postcards, posters, sheet music, stickers, and greeting cards. However, since the 1990s, the term has been used to refer to ...

  11. Continuous stationery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_stationery

    Continuous stationery (UK) or continuous form paper (US) is paper which is designed for use with dot-matrix and line printers with appropriate paper-feed mechanisms. Other names include fan-fold paper, sprocket-feed paper, burst paper, lineflow (New Zealand), tractor-feed paper, and pin-feed paper. It can be single-ply (usually woodfree ...