credit card
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credit card
Summary
credit card ranks in the top 8% of finance entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,774 views/month).[1]
Key Facts
- credit card is a type of payment card[2].
- credit card's Commons category is recorded as Credit cards[3].
- credit card's Unicode character is recorded as 💳[4].
- credit card comprises cash advance[5].
- credit card comprises credit card in Japan[6].
- credit card's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Credit cards[7].
- credit card's OpenStreetMap tag is recorded as payment:credit_cards=yes[8].
- credit card's described by source is recorded as Security Engineering: A Guide to Building Dependable Distributed Systems, 2nd edition[9].
- credit card's topic has template is recorded as Template:Credit cards[10].
- credit card's used by is recorded as cash advance[11].
- credit card's used by is recorded as App-o-rama[12].
- credit card's equivalent class is recorded as https://schema.org/CreditCard[13].
- credit card's different from is recorded as charge card[14].
- credit card's different from is recorded as debit card[15].
- credit card's length is recorded as {'unit': 'Q174789', 'amount': '+85.60'}[16].
- credit card's width is recorded as {'unit': 'Q174789', 'amount': '+53.98'}[17].
- credit card's thickness is recorded as {'unit': 'Q174789', 'amount': '+0.76'}[18].
- credit card's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as Wikipedia:Vital articles/Level/4[19].
- credit card's model item is recorded as American Express Gold Card[20].
- credit card's social media followers is recorded as {'amount': '+1244962'}[21].
Body
Works and Contributions
Things named for credit card include Mobile Homer[22], a television series episode[23], directed by Raymond S. Persi[24].
Why It Matters
credit card ranks in the top 8% of finance entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,774 views/month).[1] It has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] It is known by 72 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]
Entities named for it include Mobile Homer[22], a television series episode[23], directed by Raymond S. Persi[24].