Discount /(?; 277)/

Dis·count

Discount

v. t.

imp. & p. p. Discounted; p. pr. & vb. n. Discounting

  1. To deduct from an account, debt, charge, and the like; to make an abatement of; as, merchants sometimes discount five or six per cent for prompt payment of bills.
  2. To lend money upon, deducting the discount or allowance for interest; as, the banks discount notes and bills of exchange.
    Discount only unexceptionable paper.
    — Walsh.
  3. To take into consideration beforehand; to anticipate and form conclusions concerning (an event).
  4. To leave out of account; to take no notice of. [R.]
    Of the three opinions (I discount Brown's).

Discount

v. i.
  1. To lend, or make a practice of lending, money, abating the discount; as, the discount for sixty or ninety days.

Discount

n.
  1. A counting off or deduction made from a gross sum on any account whatever; an allowance upon an account, debt, demand, price asked, and the like; something taken or deducted.
  2. A deduction made for interest, in advancing money upon, or purchasing, a bill or note not due; payment in advance of interest upon money.
  3. The rate of interest charged in discounting.

Phrases & Compounds

At a discount
below par, or below the nominal value; hence, colloquially, out of favor; poorly esteemed; depreciated.
Bank discount
a sum equal to the interest at a given rate on the principal (face) of a bill or note from the time of discounting until it become due.
Discount broker
one who makes a business of discounting commercial paper; a bill broker.
Discount day
a particular day of the week when a bank discounts bills.
True discount
the interest which, added to a principal, will equal the face of a note when it becomes due. The principal yielding this interest is the present value of the note.