Chapter 2 Discussion Q's Flashcards

Memorization

1
Q

Why is the use of a transactions worksheet impractical in actual practice?

A

Transaction worksheets are impractical due to manual entry and error risks.

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2
Q

What is an ‘account’? How are debits and credits used to record transactions?

A

An ‘account’ tracks financial transactions. Debits increase assets/expenses; credits increase liabilities/equity/revenues.

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3
Q

Some tend to associate “good” and “bad” or “increase” and “decrease” with credits and debits. Is this a valid association? Explain.

A

Yes, it’s valid because debits generally signify increases/good, while credits signify decreases/bad.

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4
Q

The pattern of recording increases as debits and decreases as credits is common to asset and expense accounts. Provide an example.

A

Example: Buying inventory with cash increases “Inventory” (debit) and decreases “Cash” (credit).

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5
Q

The pattern of recording increases and credits and decreases as debits is common to liabilities, equity, and revenue accounts. Provide an example.

A

Example: Receiving payment increases “Cash” (debit) and “Service Revenue” (credit).

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6
Q

Summarise the rules for using debits and credits to record assets, expenses, liabilities, equity, and revenues.

A

Debit assets/expenses to increase; credit liabilities/equity/revenues to increase. Debit the opposite accounts to decrease them.

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7
Q

What is a Trial Balance? Why is it prepared?

A

Trial Balance lists accounts and balances to ensure debits = credits, for financial position.

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8
Q

How is a Trial Balance used to prepare financial statements?

A

Trial Balance transfers balances to statements, ensuring accuracy before preparing.

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9
Q

A General Journal is often called a book of original entry. Why?

A

General Journal is the first entry point for transactions, hence the ‘book of original entry’.

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10
Q

The positioning of a debit-credit entry in the General Journal is similar in some respects to instructions written in a computer program. Explain, using an example.

A

Entries in the General Journal resemble coding commands, specifying debits and credits.

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11
Q

What is a General Ledger? Why is it prepared?

A

General Ledger records all financial transactions, aiding detailed account activity tracking.

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12
Q

What is a Chart of Accounts? How are the accounts generally arranged and why?

A

Chart of Accounts lists accounts systematically by category for financial reporting.

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13
Q

List the steps in the accounting cycle.

A

Accounting cycle steps: Analyze, journalize, post to the ledger, unadjusted trial balance, adjusting entries, adjusted trial balance, financial statements, close temporary accounts, post-closing trial balance.

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