0 present participle of cashier
1 to officially dismiss (= remove from a job) a person from a military organization, especially making them lose their honour at the same time
Cashiering is frequently incurred for nothing more serious than passing a dud cheque.
In the case of an officer a sentence of cashiering always accompanies a sentence of penal servitude or imprisonment.
For an officer the punishment is cashiering, or some lesser punishment, and for an airman it is imprisonment, or some lesser punishment.
Cashiering is probably in very many cases a far more serious punishment than imprisonment.
They were sentenced to fines ranging from£5 to£100 by civil courts and from severe reprimand to cashiering and imprisonment for five years by military courts.
We are told that cashiering is in some cases equivalent to discharge with ignominy.
The term "discharge" in this connection is defined as including cashiering, dismissal, removal, retirement and resignation.
Is he aware also that it has been estimated that some 50,000 employees in clearing banks are currently doing cashiering and book-keeping work?