Finance Dictionary Pro is a finance-focused educational dictionary designed to explain terms in plain language and connect them to real use cases, related terms, and study context.
Students, exam candidates, professionals, and curious readers who need quick but useful explanations of finance concepts.
AI may help draft, expand, normalize, or reorganize content. Pages are then improved through editorial cleanup, finance-domain filtering, link repair, and ongoing revision. AI assistance is part of the workflow, not a guarantee of final accuracy.
No. This site is for education and reference only. For high-stakes decisions, use current official sources and qualified professional advice.
The site is being improved iteratively. Some pages are already strong topic guides, while others still need tighter finance focus, stronger examples, better related-term sections, or merger into a better article.
No. Quizzes are optional, but they are being added where they improve recall and understanding. The target is useful learning support, not quiz spam.
The standard is finance relevance. If a term is clearly outside banking, investing, accounting, taxation, economics, business finance, insurance, or finance-adjacent operations, it should usually be removed.
Yes. Send the term, the page URL, and the issue to info@tokenizer.ca. Missing finance terms and better related-term suggestions are especially useful.
The site aims to be broadly useful, with Canada-aware explanations where terminology or practice differs. Some terms are global, while others need jurisdiction-specific caution.
FinanceDictionaryPro.com is published by Tokenizer Inc. See the Author and About pages for the editorial model and project scope.
The site is being refactored away from a broad legacy definitions archive into a topic-first finance reference. Weak, duplicate, or off-domain entries may be removed, merged, or moved into stronger finance sections instead of preserved as isolated stubs.
Start with a topic section such as Banking, Investing, Financial Statements, Market Structure, Taxation, Risk Management, or Valuation. Use the landing page to narrow the question, then open the term-level article for definitions, mechanics, examples, and related concepts.
No. Page dates help with site publishing and maintenance, but they are not a guarantee that the page reflects the latest law, filing requirement, rate convention, market rule, tax rule, or accounting standard. For current obligations, verify against authoritative sources.
Send the page URL, the specific issue, and the finance context. Reports are easiest to act on when they identify whether a page is inaccurate, incomplete, off-topic, duplicated, poorly linked, or missing an important related term.