https://www.proz.com/kudoz/french-to-english/finance-general/1521714-frais-dopposition-sur-ch%C3%A8que.html

Glossary entry

French term or phrase:

Frais d'opposition sur chèque

English translation:

fee for stop payment order on a check

Added to glossary by Michael Lotz
Aug 29, 2006 18:21
18 yrs ago
6 viewers *
French term

Frais d'opposition sur chèque

French to English Bus/Financial Finance (general) Banking
En tant que titulaire d'un compte professionel au XX, vous êtes exonéré des "frais d'opposition sur chèque".

Merci!
Change log

Aug 29, 2006 18:51: Premium✍️ changed "Language pair" from "English to French" to "French to English"

Discussion

Tony M Aug 29, 2006:
Please specify if UK/EU or US English is required?

Proposed translations

+4
11 mins
Selected

fee for stop payment order on a check

french to english..
Peer comment(s):

agree JH Trads
12 mins
merci Hugo
agree Premium✍️
16 mins
merci MultiPro
agree Gina W : right, stop payment
6 hrs
thanks gad
agree Natasha Dupuy
11 hrs
thanks Natasha
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+4
10 mins

fees for stopping a cheque

Don't know if there is a neater, more formal term, but that's what it means, at any rate.
Peer comment(s):

agree Josephine79 : For a UK audience this is what you'd say.
1 hr
Thanks, Josephine!
agree writeaway : or fee for stopping payment on a cheque.as to neutral: of course a cheque can be stopped!!!
1 hr
Thanks, W/A! :-)
neutral Premium✍️ : Can you "stop a cheque"? :O
2 hrs
Yes, indeed! Well, it's the standard expression in the UK, and according to Michael's answer, in the US too.
agree Julie Barber : of course you can stop a cheque....
15 hrs
Thanks a lot, Julie!
agree df49f (X) : also found: stop cheque fee & cheque stop fee & stop payment fee (plus check for US) ! take your pick !
16 hrs
Thanks, Dominique! I think each bank has its own particular terminology, so there are lots of variants!
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+1
13 hrs

charge for stopping a cheque

Well you're all as near as dammit, (I have had a look at some of the UK bank sites).
The only thing I would say is that charge seems to be far more widely used than fee, not that this makes a great deal of difference.
Peer comment(s):

agree Tony M : Thanks, Marc! Yes, you're absolutely right, in the UK we do certainly speak most often of 'bank charges', and bank conditions state that 'a charge will be made for...'
3 hrs
Thanks Tony, this also applies to a similar question from EmmanuelleAnne on another type of bank charge
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