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  2. Paycheck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paycheck

    Paycheck. A paycheck, also spelled paycheque, pay check or pay cheque, is traditionally a paper document (a cheque) issued by an employer to pay an employee for services rendered. In recent times, the physical paycheck has been increasingly replaced by electronic direct deposits to the employee's designated bank account or loaded onto a payroll ...

  3. Wikipedia:Stub Makers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub_Makers

    The Stub Makers are Wikipedians whose primary existence in Wikipedia is to create stubs. This may encourage new articles when others are unhappy with the stub and decide to expand it. Unfortunately, this also creates more work for other Wikipedians that contribute substantially and fills up the recent changes list.

  4. How To Read a Pay Stub - AOL

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

    What Is a Pay Stub? Your pay stub is the part of a paper paycheck that you keep after you cash or deposit the check.

  5. Your 5 Biggest Paycheck Mistakes, According to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/5-biggest-paycheck-mistakes...

    Not checking your pay stub. Very few employees check their pay stubs, yet understanding the information on the stub is important for personal finance management, said Sean Fox, president of debt ...

  6. Wikipedia:Stub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Stub

    How to mark an article as a stub. After writing a short article, or finding an unmarked stub, you should insert a stub template. Choose from among the templates listed at Wikipedia:WikiProject Stub sorting/Stub types, or if you are unsure what template to use, just use a generic { {stub}}, which others can sort later.

  7. Category:Company stubs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Company_stubs

    Companies by country. In addition to the above, please use a stub for the country in which the company is based, if there is one (see Category:Company stubs by country ). If there is not such a stub, please use the top level stub for the country in addition to a stub for companies of the business sector it operates in.

  8. Category:Free and open-source software stubs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Free_and_open...

    Free and open-source software stubs. This category is maintained by WikiProject Stub sorting. Please propose new stub templates and categories here before creation. This category is for stub articles relating to Free and open-source software. You can help by expanding them.

  9. Template:Stub documentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Stub_documentation

    A stub is an article containing only a few sentences of text which is too short to provide encyclopedic coverage of a subject. How is a stub identified? If possible, try to find the most appropriate stub template for the article.

  10. Template:Finance-stub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Finance-stub

    This template is used to identify a finance-related stub. It uses {}, which is a meta-template designed to ease the process of creating and maintaining stub templates. Usage. Typing {{Finance-stub}} produces the message shown at the beginning, and adds the article to the following category: Category:Finance stubs (population: 596)

  11. StubHub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StubHub

    StubHub was founded in March 2000 as a class project [7] by Eric Baker and Jeff Fluhr, both former Stanford Business School students and investment bankers. [8] One of its first major sports deals was with the Seattle Mariners in 2001. [9] In 2002, eBay was in talks to acquire StubHub for US$20 million, although the agreement had later "fallen ...