Associations to the word «Receipt»
Noun
- Transaction
- Cash
- Recruitment
- Subsidy
- Cent
- Donation
- Gdp
- Income
- Confirmation
- Due
- Valuable
- Auditor
- Capita
- Pastry
- Debt
- Creditor
- Treasurer
- Admiral
- Fee
- Eligibility
- Custom
- Merchandise
- Signature
- Certificate
- Housekeeper
- Valuation
- Applicant
- Cookbook
- Warehouse
- Drawer
- Packet
- Teller
- Bribe
- Accounting
- File
- Evidence
- Audit
- Taxation
- Inventory
- Budget
- Purchase
- Mailing
- Earning
- Dollar
- Royalty
- Tithe
- Claimant
- Fund
- Amount
- Pay
- Commissary
- Tiding
- Printer
- Mortgage
- Petition
- Exploitation
- Banker
- Pudding
- Ratification
- Pound
- Deduction
- Document
- Customer
- Paying
- Parcel
- Envelope
- Evasion
- Briefcase
- Vulnerability
- Benefit
- Wage
- Profit
- Investment
- Complaint
- Filing
Pictures for the word «Receipt»
Wiktionary
RECEIPT, noun. The act of receiving, or the fact of having been received.
RECEIPT, noun. (obsolete) The fact of having received a blow, injury etc.
RECEIPT, noun. (in the plural) A quantity or amount received; takings.
RECEIPT, noun. A written acknowledgment that a specified article or sum of money has been received.
RECEIPT, noun. A recipe, instructions, prescription.
RECEIPT, noun. (obsolete) A receptacle.
RECEIPT, noun. (obsolete) A revenue office.
RECEIPT, noun. (obsolete) Reception, as an act of hospitality.
RECEIPT, noun. (obsolete) Capability of receiving; capacity.
RECEIPT, noun. (obsolete) A recess; a retired place.
RECEIPT, verb. To give or write a receipt (for something)
RECEIPT, verb. To put a receipt on, as by writing or stamping; to mark a bill as having been paid
Dictionary definition
RECEIPT, noun. The act of receiving.
RECEIPT, noun. An acknowledgment (usually tangible) that payment has been made.
RECEIPT, verb. Report the receipt of; "The program committee acknowledged the submission of the authors of the paper".
RECEIPT, verb. Mark or stamp as paid.
Wise words
Occasionally in life there are those moments of unutterable
fulfillment which cannot be completely explained by those
symbols called words. Their meanings can only be articulated
by the inaudible language of the heart.