Please check that cheque for errors.
It isn't. "Kiting a cheque" is slang for writing a bad cheque when there is no money in your account. A kite is made of paper and has nothing between it and the ground - a bad cheque is paper and has no money behind it - you can see the similarities that made people start using the term "kite" to mean "writing a bad cheque."
In the US "cheak" is correctly spelled - check (as in "a check mark" or "pay by check") in some countries such as the UK it may be spelled cheque. The side of your mouth is spelled cheek.
A cheque with amount 1 lac or more
Please find attached approved PRRO017_003-OCTG Casing to proceed
"That was wrong" is a grammatically correct sentence.
To check a cheque, you must check if the cheque is checked by checking the checked cheque of checking a checked cheque as a checker.
Cheque can be deposited at the corresponding bank only. It is the sentence containing the word cheque.
A correct sentence would have a verb and a subject such as: "This is a cheque for the refund of your deposit."
The homophone for "check" is "cheque." Both words are pronounced the same but have different spellings and meanings.
The boss gave him a cheque so that he could give him his salary straight away
Yes cheque = English check = American
check, cheque
he gave me a 100 dollar cheque
Who are the staff that check when a customer pay by cheque?
check and cheque
A cheque in which the cheque issuer has not filled in the Amount
The correct grammar is 'cashing' a cheque, or to 'cash' a cheque.