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Chinese mobile payment application
The app of UnionPay (Chinese: 云闪付; pinyin: Yúnshǎnfù) is a mobile and online payment service, developed and operated by UnionPay, the national Chinese
UnionPay_(application)
Chinese financial services company
UnionPay (Chinese: 银联; pinyin: Yínlián), also known as China UnionPay (Chinese: 中国银联; pinyin: Zhōngguó Yínlián) or by its abbreviation, CUP or UPI internationally
UnionPay
smaller platforms exist, including the People's Bank of China's (PBOC) UnionPay application. Due to the rapid adoption of e-payment platforms in China over the
Mobile_payments_in_China
Digital application and media distribution service by Google
31, 2023, Hong Kong and Macau added support for China UnionPay cards, and users can bind UnionPay cards through the Play Store app. The rumor of Google
Google_Play
Smart payment card standard
control split equally among Visa, Mastercard, JCB, American Express, China UnionPay, and Discover. EMVCo accepts public comment on its draft standards and
EMV
Financial markets payment system
largest shareholder with 16 percent of equity; others include the NAFMII, UnionPay, and the large state-owned Chinese banks.[citation needed] Foreign shareholders
Cross-Border Interbank Payment System
Cross-Border_Interbank_Payment_System
Card identifier found on payment cards
not just 650. Also, similar to the Mastercard/Diners agreement, China UnionPay cards are now treated as Discover cards and accepted on the Discover network
Payment_card_number
Allowing for contactless payments in credit and debit cards
PayPass) – MasterCard Visa Contactless (formerly payWave) – Visa QuickPass – UnionPay JCB Contactless (formerly J/Speedy), QUICPay (not compatible with EMV Contactless/ISO/IEC
Contactless_smart_card
Bank in the Philippines owned by Yuchengco family
US dollar sustainability bonds. RCBC issues VISA, Mastercard, JCB, and UnionPay credit cards through RCBC Bankard. The bank was established by Alfonso
Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation
Rizal_Commercial_Banking_Corporation
Pakistani card payment service
such as Visa, Mastercard, and UnionPay. PayPak uses Gemalto's product PURE. PURE is an off-the-shelf payment application from Gemalto that is fully compliant
PayPak
Security feature on payment cards
"CVN" or "card validation number", also "card verification number": China UnionPay, Google Ads "SPC" or "signature panel code" "CCV" or "card code verification":
Card_security_code
Distributed data store for digital transactions
Arnold, Martin (23 September 2013). "IBM in blockchain project with China UnionPay". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 9 November 2016. Retrieved
Blockchain
Set of device communication protocols
The system is currently online in Asia, through a partnership with China UnionPay and Bank of Communications. The partnership will bring the technology to
Near-field_communication
Russian payment system
credit cards with China's UnionPay on them to replace Visa and Mastercard in the processing of international transactions, UnionPay has a wider reach compared
Mir_(payment_system)
Singaporean electronic payment service provider
also a member of the Asian Payment Network (APN) and a council member of UnionPay International. NETS was first introduced to the public on 27 June 1985
NETS_(company)
Pocket-sized card with authentication circuitry
PayPass Magstripe, PayPass MChip American Express: ExpressPay Discover: Zip Unionpay: QuickPass Roll-outs started in 2005 in the U.S. Asia and Europe followed
Smart_card
Chinese commercial banking corporation
the strategic cooperation of multi-channel and multi-application e-payment with China UnionPay.[citation needed] 广发银行更名换标 发布"汇聚"红色新标识(图) (in Chinese)
China_Guangfa_Bank
Canadian payment processor
the first Canadian acquirer to offer a full processing solution for the UnionPay card portfolio. In November 2016, US-based payment processor Vantiv announced
Moneris
Technology enabling payment without physical contact
entities now offering contactless payment systems include Mastercard, China UnionPay, Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, American Express, KeyBank, Barclays, Barclaycard
Contactless_payment
Defunct UK-based payments company
potential” deal with China UnionPay that Dan Wagner personally described in a quote to the BBC as “Why did China UnionPay decide to partner with a little
Powa_Technologies
Indonesian cashless payment standard
with the PBoC commenced on 17 August 2025. These trials involve ASPI, UnionPay International (UPI), and various payment system service providers. The
QRIS
Payment system in Saudi Arabia
online. American Express: Accepted on POS terminals, ATMs, and online. UnionPay: Accepted on POS terminals, ATMs, and online. JCB: Accepted on POS terminals
Saudi_Payments_Network
Third-party mobile and online payment platform
Tencent further open up their mobile payment ecosystems to state-owned UnionPay". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 6 October 2021
Alipay
Family of distributed open-source operating systems
industrial public banking solutions of systems, tested on ATM machines with UnionPay in Chinese domestic market. The operating system has been launched with
OpenHarmony
American payment card company
issued its first non-Diners Club credit cards, DCS Ultimate Platinum UnionPay Card, and its Mastercard counterpart of the same name. This effectively
Diners_Club_International
Stored value smart card in Hong Kong
drivers had installed Octopus Mobile POS. In collaboration with China UnionPay, Octopus Cards Limited introduced Octopus card usage to two Fairwood restaurants
Octopus_card
through a POS electronic terminal, requiring the use of a simple updated application. In these cases, the cell phone becomes the payment vehicle. The phone
Rede_S.A.
Angeles, CA) Mobile payments: China Unicom, Bank of Communications, China UnionPay[citation needed] Mobile transport ticketing: China Unicom Contactless Payment/Public
List of applications of near-field communication
List_of_applications_of_near-field_communication
Rapid transit system in Uzbekistan
offices, UZPost offices and the virtual ATTO card can be opened in mobile application. There are 3 other types of preferential transport cards, which can be
Tashkent_Metro
Card used for financial transactions
number of different circumstances. The five major debit card networks are UnionPay, American Express, Discover, Mastercard, and Visa. Other card networks
Debit_card
Indian multinational card payment service
Club International Pulse in United States JCB in Japan NETS in Singapore UnionPay in China BC Card in South Korea Elo in Brazil DinaCard in Serbia RuPay
RuPay
UNIONPAY APPLICATION
UNIONPAY APPLICATION
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Ralph.A Francis Rawle from the parish of St. Juliot in Cornwall, England, was recorded as living in Plymouth, MA, in 1660. Devout Quakers seeking to escape persecution, the family emigrated to PA in 1686, bringing with them a deed from William Penn for a tract of 2,500 acres of land, which was subsequently located in Plymouth township, Philadelphia (now Montgomery) Co. His son, who had six sons himself, was a political economist and one of the first people to write on the subject and its local applications in America.
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin) and French
English (of Norman origin) and French : from Old French voisin ‘neighbor’ (Anglo-Norman French veisin) . The application is uncertain; it may be a nickname for a ‘good neighbor’, or for someone who used this word as a frequent term of address, or it may be a topographic name for someone who lived on a neighboring property.
Surname or Lastname
English (Warwickshire)
English (Warwickshire) : apparently a variant of Gourley or Gorley.Possibly an Americanized spelling of French Gourlé, from Old French gourle ‘money belt’. Its application as a surname is not clear; it may have been a metonymic occupational name for a maker of such receptacles, or perhaps a nickname for someone who was tight with his money.Alternatively, it may be an Americanized form of German Gerling or Gerlich.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : metonymic occupational name for a maker of rope, especially the type of stout rope used in maritime applications, from Anglo-Norman French cable ‘cable’ (Late Latin capulum ‘halter’, of Arabic origin, but associated by folk etymology with Latin capere ‘to seize’).English : possibly from an Old English personal name, Ceadbeald.English : metonymic occupational name for a horseman, from Middle English cabal ‘horse’.From German Göbel (see Goebel), assimilated to the English name.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : presumably from Old French joint ‘united’, ‘joined’. The application as a surname is unclear.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : apparently a nickname from Middle English to ‘exceedingly’ + gode ‘good’, perhaps ironic in application.
Surname or Lastname
Irish (County Donegal)
Irish (County Donegal) : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Duibhidhir or sometimes of Mac Duibhidhir (see Dwyer, also Dyer).English : of uncertain derivation; possibly from diver, an agent derivative of Middle English dive ‘to dip or plunge’, but if so the application is obscure. It may be a nickname for someone compared to a diving bird. Compare Ducker.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for a tall, thin man, from Middle English spir ‘stalk’, ‘stem’. This was apparently used as a personal name or byname, in view of the fact that there are patronymic derivatives. In some Middle English dialects this word also denoted reeds, and the surname may in part have been originally a topographic name for someone who lived in a marshy area. The application to a church steeple is not attested before the 16th century, and is not a likely source of the surname.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : variant of Spiro.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English child ‘child’, ‘infant’ (Old English cild), in various possible applications. The word is found in Old English as a byname, and in Middle English as a widely used affectionate term of address. It was also used as a term of status for a young man of noble birth, although the exact meaning is not clear; in the 13th and 14th centuries it was a technical term used of a young noble awaiting elevation to the knighthood. In other cases it may have been applied as a byname to a youth considerably younger than his brothers or to one who was a minor on the death of his father.English : possibly a topographic name from Old English cielde ‘spring (water)’, a rare word derived from c(e)ald ‘cold’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English, Old English box ‘box tree’ (Latin buxus), in any of a number of possible applications. It may have been a topographic name for someone who lived by a box thicket, a habitational name from one of the places called Box, in Gloucestershire, Hertfordshire, and Wiltshire, or a metonymic occupational name for someone who worked box wood, which is very hard and for this reason was used to make a variety of tools. In some cases it may even have been a nickname for a person with pale or yellow skin, for example as the result of jaundice, a reference to the color of box wood.
Surname or Lastname
Scottish
Scottish : name of a clan associated with Caithness, derived from the Old Norse personal name Gunnr (or the feminine form Gunne), a short form of any of various compound names with the first element gunn ‘battle’.Scottish : sometimes an Anglicized form of Gaelic Mac Gille Dhuinn ‘son of the servant of the brown one’ (see Dunn). (According to Woulfe a name of the same form also existed in Sligo, Ireland.)English : metonymic occupational name for someone who operated a siege engine or cannon, perhaps also a nickname for a forceful person, from Middle English gunne, gonne ‘ballista’, ‘cannon’, ‘gun’. The term originated as a humorous application of the Scandinavian female personal name Gunne or Gunnhildr.
Surname or Lastname
Irish
Irish : reduced Anglicized form of either of two Gaelic names, Ó DuibhÃn ‘descendant of DuibhÃn’, a byname meaning ‘little black one’, or Ó DaimhÃn ‘descendant of DaimhÃn’, a byname meaning ‘fawn’, ‘little stag’. These are attenuated versions of Ó Dubháin and Ó Damháin, and are the phonetic origin of Anglicizations with an internal v (as opposed to w, as in Dewan, or monosyllabic forms with an o or u) (see Doane).English and French : nickname, of literal or ironic application, from Middle English, Old French devin, divin ‘excellent’, ‘perfect’ (Latin divinus ‘divine’).
Surname or Lastname
English and German
English and German : from a Germanic personal name, either a short form of compound names such as Billard, or else a byname Bill(a), from Old English bil ‘sword’, ‘halberd’ (or a Continental cognate). (Bill as a short form of William was not used until the 17th century.)English : metonymic occupational name for a maker of pruning hooks and similar implements, from Middle English bill, from Old English bil ‘sword’, with the meaning shifted to a more peaceful agricultural application (see Biller 5).
Surname or Lastname
Northern English
Northern English : probably a habitational name from a minor place in Soulby, Cumbria, called Longthorn, from Old English lang ‘long’ + horn ‘projecting headland’, or a topographic name with the same meaning.English : nickname from Middle English lang, long ‘long’ + horn ‘horn’, with various possible applications; it could have denoted a horn blower or possibly a cuckhold, or it may have referred to some physical characteristic; there is some suggestion that horn in some names may mean ‘head’ or otherwise ‘phallus’.Danish : habitational name from Langhorn.Dutch : nickname for someone with long ears.
Surname or Lastname
German
German : from an agent derivative of Middle High German brennen ‘to burn’, in various applications. Often it is an occupational name for a distiller of spirits; it may also refer to a charcoal or lime burner or to someone who cleared forests by burning.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : occupational name for a distiller, from German Brenner, literally ‘burner’ (see 1).English : metathesized variant of Berner 2 and 3.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Old English stagga ‘male deer’, ‘stag’. In northern dialects of Middle English the term was also used of a young horse, perhaps under Scandinavian influence, and in some cases this meaning may lie behind the original application of the name.
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, French, and German
English, Scottish, French, and German : from the name of the flower, Middle English, Old French, Middle High German rose (Latin rosa), in various applications. In part it is a topographic name for someone who lived at a place where wild roses grew, or a habitational name for someone living at a house bearing the sign of the rose. It is also found, especially in Europe, as a nickname for a man with a ‘rosy’ complexion. As an American surname, this name has absorbed cognates and similar-sounding names from other European languages.English : variant of Royce.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : ornamental name from the word for the flower (German Rose, Yiddish royz), or a metronymic name from the Yiddish female personal name Royze, derived from the word for the flower.French families bearing the name Rose are descended from a native of Paris, documented in Quebec City in 1666.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Job.English : nickname from Old French job, joppe ‘sorry wretch’, ‘fool’ (perhaps a transferred application of the name of the Biblical character).English : from Middle English jubbe, jobbe ‘vessel containing four gallons’, hence perhaps a metonymic occupational name for a cooper. It could also have been a nickname for a heavy drinker or for a tubby person.English : metonymic occupational name for a maker or seller (or nickname for a wearer) of the long woolen garment known in Middle English and Old French as a jube or jupe. This word ultimately derives from Arabic.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Perrier 1 and 2.American bearers of the surname include Bennet Puryear (1826–1914), born in Mecklenburg Co., VA, youngest son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Marshall) Puryear, who studied medicine and chemistry before the Civil War, after which he became a professor of chemistry; he did pioneering work in the application of chemistry to agriculture. He had 11 children by his two wives.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Middle English, Old French branche ‘branch’ (Late Latin branca ‘foot’, ‘paw’), the application of which as a surname is not clear. In America it has been adopted as a translation of any of the numerous Swedish surnames containing the element gren ‘branch’, and likewise of French Labranche, German Zweig, and Finnish Haara, Oksa, and Oksana.
UNIONPAY APPLICATION
UNIONPAY APPLICATION
Boy/Male
Tamil
Mind
Female
English
English pet form of Latin Laura, LAUREEN means "laurel."
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Malayalam, Marathi
Like Om
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Pride
Female
English
English variant spelling of Danish Karen, CAREN means "pure."
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Marathi, Telugu
Twins; Zodiac Sign of Gemini
Boy/Male
Muslim
Place to sleep, Quarters, Lodgings
Boy/Male
Hindu
Fragrance
Girl/Female
Teutonic American Latin Norse Scandinavian
noble.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Brilliant; Splendid; Eastern Wind
UNIONPAY APPLICATION
UNIONPAY APPLICATION
UNIONPAY APPLICATION
UNIONPAY APPLICATION
UNIONPAY APPLICATION
n.
The quality or state of being universal; unlimited extension or application; generality; -- distinguished from particularity; as, the unversality of a proposition; the unversality of sin; the unversality of the Deluge.
adv.
An inseparable prefix, or particle, signifying not; in-; non-. In- is prefixed mostly to words of Latin origin, or else to words formed by Latin suffixes; un- is of much wider application, and is attached at will to almost any adjective, or participle used adjectively, or adverb, from which it may be desired to form a corresponding negative adjective or adverb, and is also, but less freely, prefixed to nouns. Un- sometimes has merely an intensive force; as in unmerciless, unremorseless.
v. t.
To wash lightly; to cleanse with a second or repeated application of water after washing.
n.
The act of fixing the mind or closely applying one's self; assiduous effort; close attention; as, to injure the health by application to study.
a.
Not specially appropriate; having not special application.
n.
To heal by applications or medicaments; to cure by remedial treatment; to apply salve to; as, to salve a wound.
n.
A certain function relating to a system of forces and their points of application, -- first used by Clausius in the investigation of problems in molecular physics.
n.
The capacity of being practically applied or used; relevancy; as, a rule of general application.
n.
The act of making request of soliciting; as, an application for an office; he made application to a court of chancery.
v.
Personal reference or application.
n.
A blistering application or plaster; a vesicant; an epispastic.
n.
Hence, in specific uses: (a) That part of a sermon or discourse in which the principles before laid down and illustrated are applied to practical uses; the "moral" of a fable. (b) The use of the principles of one science for the purpose of enlarging or perfecting another; as, the application of algebra to geometry.
v. t.
The act of employing anything, or of applying it to one's service; the state of being so employed or applied; application; employment; conversion to some purpose; as, the use of a pen in writing; his machines are in general use.
n.
The act of applying or laying on, in a literal sense; as, the application of emollients to a diseased limb.
v. t.
To cause to relish anything, as if with a sauce; to tickle or gratify, as the palate; to please; to stimulate; hence, to cover, mingle, or dress, as if with sauce; to make an application to.
n.
The act of directing or referring something to a particular case, to discover or illustrate agreement or disagreement, fitness, or correspondence; as, I make the remark, and leave you to make the application; the application of a theory.
n.
A request; a document containing a request; as, his application was placed on file.
n.
An external application which produces redness of the skin.
v. t.
To convert into vapor, as by the application of heat, whether naturally or artificially.