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Answer for the clue "You can take it to the bank ", 8 letters:
passbook

Alternative clues for the word passbook

Word definitions for passbook in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (context banking English) A customer's record of deposits and withdrawals from a savings account at a bank, typically recorded in a small booklet. The bank keeps its own record, which is final in any dispute.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
A passbook or bankbook is a paper book used to record bank transactions on a deposit account . Depending on the country or the financial institution , it can be of the dimensions of a chequebook or a passport . Traditionally, a passbook is used for accounts ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a record of deposits and withdrawals and interest held by depositors at certain banks [syn: bankbook ]

Usage examples of passbook.

Phone bill, the Delta Airlines ticket envelope, receipts from the Honky-Tonk, savings passbooks, phony documents.

In the other drawer were a few checkbook stubs, a couple of bank account passbooks, and bank statements and credit card bills, held neatly together with treasury tags.

As a model, I used the Xerox copy of the withdrawal slip she'd tucked in her passbook.

He knew that the passbook with Kimball and Biffs names had been a plant.

Stanley put the sealed envelope into his hip pocket, collected his checkbook, certificates of deposit, and passbook, but he paused at the door.

He revealed his financial situation to her, virtually begged her to look at his savings account passbook and short-term certificates of deposit which totaled nearly thirty-two thousand dollars.

Though seemingly an operation of incomprehensible complexity, the use of computers made it as routine and far more efficient than written entries in a passbook savings account.

But the money is currently in a passbook savings account in Tulsa.

Inside were two passbooks for Mickey's savings accounts, six cash-register receipts, a Delta ticket envelope, and a folded sheet of paper.

I can't tell you how many times I hunted for the goddam savins passbook they had to have given him when he opened his own account with that dough, but I never found it.

I also had Joe's savins passbook made over to me, and re-opened the kids' college accounts.

The number on the account was his old KGB service number, and tucked in the passbook was the banker's business card, complete with his Internet address for making wire transfers-the proper code-phrase had been agreed upon and written into his bank file.