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The phrase "wrote a cheque" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to the act of writing a cheque as a form of payment. Example: "John wrote a cheque for $100 to pay his monthly rent."
Exact(10)
Remember the last time you wrote a cheque?
If one such "fake accountant" suggested they needed money for something, she simply wrote a cheque.
Using the customary idiom of a chief executive officer, West explained to his audience that the pandas "wrote a cheque that allowed us to mend the penguin pool".
Mr al-Bayoumi met the two hijackers in a restaurant in Los Angeles, provided them with contacts in the Muslim community in San Diego, and even wrote a cheque for the deposit on their apartment.
Mostyn, who wrote a cheque for £100,000 to save the club from liquidation in 2008, tweeted: "OMG just got home 0250 What has just happened so proud of everyone @afcbournemouth on promotion to the @premierleague £DreamsDoComeTrue".
Related: Bournemouth 3-0 Bolton Wanderers | Championship match report Mostyn, who wrote a cheque for £100,000 to save the club from liquidation in 2008, tweeted: "OMG just got home 0250 What has just happened so proud of everyone @afcbournemouth on promotion to the @premierleague £DreamsDoComeTrue".
Similar(50)
The seller might just write a cheque.
The British government, for example, could simply write a cheque to its Tanzanian counterpart.
She pleads with her husband to write a cheque to free all the women.
But he also acknowledged: "It's not innovation until someone writes a cheque".
"If you're writing a cheque for someone, the transaction is quite cold," observes Yarker.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com