bills and notes
121UST — The abbreviation for the United States Treasury. UST is commonly used for references to the Treasury debt that the U.S. issues. Traders will often use the phrases UST yields or UST curve to refer to Treasury yields or the Treasury yield curve.… …
122government obligations — U.S. government backed debt instruments, which are considered among the safest investments possible, including Treasury bonds, bills, and notes, and savings bonds. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary …
123stamp acts — In English law, acts regulating the stamps upon deeds, contracts, agreements, papers in law proceedings, bills and notes, letters, receipts, and other papers. English Act of 1765 requiring that revenue stamps be affixed to all official documents… …
124bill-book — An account book in which bills and notes are entered, showing their dates, due dates and the names of the parties …
125receivables — rɪ ɪËvÉ™bls n. bills and notes which are owed, incoming payments on accounts …
126currency — n. 1. Publicity, general reception. 2. Circulation, transmission from hand to hand. 3. Money; aggregate of coin, bills and notes; circulating medium …
127nonnegotiable instrument — According to a well understood meaning in the law of bills and notes, a term of art which refers only to commercial paper. An instrument which is not negotiable, that is, any instrument which does not meet the requirements laid down to qualify an …
128AS`SIGNATS — bills or notes, to the number of 45 thousand million, issued as currency by the revolutionary government of France in 1790, and based on the security of Church and other lands appropriated by it, and which in course of time sunk in value, to… …