To bring something to a stop is to halt or cease its movement. The payment of money is simply giving someone cash or funds in exchange for goods or services. So, in a nutshell, stopping is stopping, and paying is paying. Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
A homophone that means to bring a stop, payment of money
So you can stop a check with money on it that you lost.
No. A stop payment can be issued only before the check payment is made by the bank. If you try a stop payment after the bank has paid for the check, the bank wont accept it because the stop payment instruction is useless now and cannot be executed.
It Depends: Yes - If you gave the check to someone to who you owned some money and need to pay that person for the service he provided you. Since a stop payment results in no-payment the person who got the check can get you arrested No - If the check was lost or stolen. You can always issue a stop payment to ensure that even if the check is misused by anyone to whom you did not intend to give it, the bank won't pay the check.
It Depends: Yes - If you gave the check to someone to who you owned some money and need to pay that person for the service he provided you. Since a stop payment results in no-payment the person who got the check can get you arrested No - If the check was lost or stolen. You can always issue a stop payment to ensure that even if the check is misused by anyone to whom you did not intend to give it, the bank won't pay the check.
The homophone for "to bring to a stop" is "halt" and the homophone for "payment of money" is "alt."
check and cheque
A homophone that means to bring a stop, payment of money
The homophone of "to bring to a stop" is "break," while the homophone of "payment of money" is "buy."
check, cheque
The homophones for "to bring to a stop" are halt and halt. The homophones for "payment of money" are doe and dough.
check, cheque
check, cheque
check, cheque
check and cheque
check and cheque
check, cheque