Acct: Chapter 4 TF

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A 10-column worksheet is a permanent accounting record

F

A revenue account is closed with a credit to the revenue account and a debit to Income Summary

F

Accrued revenues are revenues that have been received but not yet recognized

F

Accrued revenues are revenues that have been recognized but cash has not been received before financial statements have been prepared

F

Accumulated depreciation is a liability account and has a credit normal account balance

F

Adjusting entries are not necessary if the trial balance debit and credit columns balances are equal

F

Adjusting entries are recorded in the general journal but are not posted to the accounts in the general ledger

F

An adjusted trial balance must be prepared before the adjusting entries can be recorded

F

An adjusting entry always involves two balance sheet accounts

F

An adjusting entry would be made to the revenue account only when cash is received

F

Cash is a temporary account

F

Closing entries deal primarily with the balances of permanent accounts

F

If prepaid costs are initially recorded as an asset, no adjusting entries will be required in the future

F

In the accounting cycle, closing entries are prepared before adjusting entries

F

Income will always be greater under the cash basis of accounting than under the accrual basis of accounting

F

Revenue received before it is recognized and expenses paid before being used or consumed are both initially recorded as liabilities

F

TF The periodicity assumption is often referred to as the expense recognition principle

F

The Dividends account is closed to the Income Summary account at the end of the year

F

The accounting cycle begins with the journalizing of transactions

F

The accrued interest for a three month note payable of $10,000 dated December 1, 2013 at an interest rate of 6% is $150 on December 31, 2013

F

The adjusting entry for accrued salaries requires a debit to Salaries and Wages Payable

F

The adjusting entry for unearned revenue results in an increase (a debit) to an asset account and an increase (a credit) to a revenue account

F

The balances of the Depreciation Expense and the Accumulated Depreciation accounts should always be the same

F

The book value of a depreciable asset is always equal to its market value because depreciation is a valuation technique

F

The difference between unearned revenue and accrued revenue is that accrued revenue has been recorded and needs adjusting and unearned revenue has never been recorded

F

When closing entries are prepared, each income statement account is closed directly to retained earnings

F

A contra asset account is subtracted from a related account in the balance sheet

T

A liability--revenue account relationship exists with an unearned rent revenue adjusting entry

T

Accounts receivable is a permanent account

T

An expense account is closed with a credit to the expense account and a debit to the Income Summary account

T

Asset prepayments become expenses when they expire

T

Closing entries result in the transfer of net income or net loss into the Retained Earnings account

T

Financial statements can be prepared from the information provided by an adjusted trial balance

T

Financial statements must be prepared before the closing entries are made

T

The cost of a depreciable asset less accumulated depreciation reflects the book value of the asset

T

The only accounts that are closed are temporary accounts

T

The post closing trial balance will have fewer accounts than the adjusted trial balance

T

The post-closing trial balance will contain only permanent--balance sheet--accounts

T

Unearned revenue is a prepayment that required an adjusting entry when services are performed

T

Without an adjusting entry for accrued interest expense, liabilities and interest expense are understated, and net income and stockholder' equity are overstated

T

Accrued revenues are revenues that have been recognized but not yet recorded

Tru

Adjusting entries are often made because some business events are not recorded as they occur

Tru

An adjusting entry always involves a balance sheet account and an income statement account

Tru

An adjusting entry to a prepaid expense is required to recognize expired expenses

Tru

Recognizing when an expense contributes to the production of a revenue is critical

Tru

Revenue received before it is recognized and expenses used or consumed before being paid are both initially recorded as liabilities

Tru

TF Expense recognition is tied to revenue recognition

Tru

TF The expense recognition principle requires that efforts be related to accomplishments

Tru

TF The revenue recognition principle dictates that the revenue be recognized in the accounting period in which the performance obligation is satisfied

Tru

TF the periodicity assumption states that the economic life of a business entity can be divided into artificial time periods

Tru

The cash basis of accounting is not in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles

Tru

The expense recognition principle is frequently referred to as the matching principle

Tru

TF The revenue recognition principle and the expense recognition principle are helpful guides used in determining net income or net loss for a period

tru


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