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  2. Imprest system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imprest_system

    The imprest system is a form of financial accounting. The most common is petty cash . [ 1 ] The basic characteristic of an imprest system is that a fixed amount is reserved, which after a certain period or when circumstances require, because money was spent, will be replenished.

  3. File:Imprest Supply (No 2) Act 1881.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Imprest_Supply_(No_2...

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  4. File:Imprest Supply (No 2) Act 1882.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Imprest_Supply_(No_2...

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  5. File:The Imprest Supply Act 1879 (No 1) Act 1879.pdf - Wikipedia

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  6. Auditor of the imprests - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditor_of_the_imprests

    The auditors were paid by fees. This made the offices extremely profitable. [2] In 1703, the office had a salary of £300, but the fees were worth at least £700 more. [3] Its value is demonstrated by the need to pay £7,000 compensation to John Stuart, Lord Mount Stuart when the office was abolished in 1784. [4]

  7. Small business - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_business

    Small businesses in the Central Zone of São Paulo. Researchers and analysts of small or owner-managed businesses generally behave as if nominal organizational forms (e.g., partnership, sole-trader, or corporation), and the consequent legal and accounting boundaries of owner-managed firms are consistently meaningful.

  8. Method of steepest descent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_of_steepest_descent

    In mathematics, the method of steepest descent or saddle-point method is an extension of Laplace's method for approximating an integral, where one deforms a contour integral in the complex plane to pass near a stationary point (saddle point), in roughly the direction of steepest descent or stationary phase.