ninety two pounds and eighty pence only
2007-03-01 09:44:53
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Ninety Two Pounds-80 or Ninety Two Pounds-80p or Ninety Two Pound Eighty Pence . I thought cheques were obsolete !
2007-03-01 10:08:34
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answer #2
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answered by wjay100 1
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Ninety Two Pounds and Eighty Pence
2007-03-01 09:46:26
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answer #3
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answered by mxn 2
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Ninety two pounds and eighty pence.
Ninety and two are two words so do not need to be hyphenated and you only put 'only' at the end of a cheque when the amount is for pounds only so that no-one can fraudulently enter pence.
2007-03-01 09:45:29
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answer #4
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answered by Mum.of.twins 3
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Ninety-two pounds and eighty pence, though it's acceptable to write the pence in figures, if you want.
So you get this - Ninety-two pounds and 80p.
DON'T write "only" at the end - that means "and no pence".
DON'T leave out the hyphen - compund numbers are just that - compounds, which means they're one word.
2007-03-01 09:57:56
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Ninety-two pounds 80 pence only
2007-03-02 09:42:41
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answer #6
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answered by used to live in Wales 4
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Ninety-two Pounds and eighty Pence
2007-03-01 09:44:50
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answer #7
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answered by Leo 4
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in a cheque book you would write...
ninety two pounds and 80p only
This is because only the pounds have to be written in words, and the "only" is important as it prevents anyone adding any further information to the amount, thus potentially protecting you from fraud.
Hope that helps
2007-03-04 08:11:09
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answer #8
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answered by jop291106 3
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Ninety-two pounds and eighty pence
2007-03-01 10:10:54
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answer #9
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answered by BabyT 2
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Write:
Ninety-two Pounds and eighty Pence ONLY
2007-03-01 09:45:30
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answer #10
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answered by distant_foe 4
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Ninety two pounds and eighty pence only
2007-03-01 09:46:54
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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