[f. prec. + -SHIP.] The office or position of a teller.
1788. W. Eden, in G. Rose, Diaries (1860), I. 77. Ought I to seek for my son the second reversion of a Tellership?
1807. W. Taylor, in Ann. Rev., V. 565. Abolishing tellerships and auditorships of the exchequer.
1875. Contemp. Rev., XXVI. 454. The interesting history of the Exchequer, its sinecure tellerships, its clerkships of the pells.