Accounting Exam 2
Fiscal Year
A 12-month period for which financial reports are prepared.
Straight-line Method
A depreciation method in which the depreciable cost is divided by the estimated useful life. *Depreciaton Cost/Estimated useful Life*
Work Sheet
A form used to pull together all of the information needed to enter adjusting entries and prepare the financial statements.
Compound Entry
A general journal entry that affects more than two accounts.
Two-column General Ledger
A journal with only two amount columns,one for debits amounts and one for credit amounts.
Contra-asset
An account with a credit balance that is deducted from the related asset account on the balance sheet.
Property, Plant,& Equipment
Assets that are expected to serve the business for many years. Also called *plant assets* or *long-term assets*.
Journalizing
Entering the transactions in a journal.
Account Form of Balance Sheet
A balance sheet in which the assets are on the left and the liabilities and the owner's equity sections are on the right.
Report Form of Balance Sheet
A balance sheet in which the liabilities,and the owner's equity sections are shown below the assets section.
General Ledger
A comple set of all the accounts used by a business.The general ledger accumulates a complete record of the debits and credits made to each account as a result of entries made in the journal.
Journal
A day-by-day listing of the transactions of business.
Charts of Accounts
A list of all accounts used by a business.
Cash Basis of Accouting
A method of accounting under which revenues are recorded when cash is received and expenses are recorded when cash is paid.
Accrual Basis of Accounting
A method of accounting under which revenues are recorded when earned and expenses are recorded when incurred.
Ruling Method
A method of correcting an entry in which a line is drawn through the error and the correct information is placed above it.
Historical cost principle
A principle that requires assets to be recorded at their actual cost.
Income Summary
A temporary account used in the closing process to summarize the effects of all revenue and expense accounts.
Permanent Accounts
Accounts that *accumulate information* across accounting periods; all accounts reported on the balance sheet.
Temporary Accounts
Accounts that *do not accumulate information* across accounting periods but are closed, such as the drawing account and all income statement accounts.
General Ledger account
An account with columns for the debits or credit transaction and columns for the debits or credit running balance.
Correcting entry
An entry to correct an incorrect entry that has been journalized and posted to the wrong account.
Source Document
Any document that provides information about a business transaction.
Plant Assets
Assets of a durable nature that will be used for operations over several years. *Examples* include buildings and equipment.
Current Assets
Cash and assets that will be converted into cash or consumed within either one year or the normal operating cycle of the business, whichever is longer
Posting
Copying the debits and credits from the journal to the ledger accounts.All the amounts entered in the journal to the ledger is done daily or a frequent interval.
Transposition Error
Error that occurs when two digits are reversed.
Adjusting entries
Journal entries made at the end of an accounting period to reflect changes in account balances that are not the direct result of an exchange with an outside party.
Current Liabilities
Liabilities that are due within either one year or the normal operating cycle of the business, whichever is longer, and that are to be paid out of current assets.
Trial Balance
List used to prove that the totals of the debit and credits balances in the ledger accounts are equal.
Long-term Liabilities
Obligation that are not expected to be paid within a year and do not require the use of current assets. Also called *long-term debt*.
Post-Closing Trial Balance
Prepared after posting the closing entries to prove the equality of the debit and credit balances in the general ledger accounts.
Long-term Assets
See property, plant,and equipment.
Market Value
The amount an item can be sold for under normal economic conditions.
Depreciable Cost
The cost of an asset that is subject to depreciation
Undepreciated Cost
The difference between the asset account and its related accumulated depreciation account. Also known as *book value*.
Book Value
The difference between the asset account and its related accumulated depreciation account. The value reflected by the accounting records.
Salvage Value
The expected market value of an asset at the end of its useful life.
Book of Original Entry
The journal or the first formal accounting record of a transaction.
Modified Cash Basis
The method of accounting that *combines aspects of the cash and accrual methods*. It uses the *cash basis* for recording revenues and most expenses. Exceptions are made when cash is paid for assets with useful lives greater than one accounting period.
Depreciation
The method of matching an asset's original cost against the revenues produced over its useful life.
Operating Cycle
The period of time required to purchase supplies and services and convert them back into cash.
Useful Life
The period of time that an asset is expected to help produce revenues.
Closing Process
The process of giving *zero balances* to the temporary accounts so that they can accumulate information for the next accounting period.
Accounting Cycle
The steps involved in accounting for all of the business activities during an accounting period.
Adjusted Trial Balance Columns
The third pair of amount columns on ther work sheet. They are used to prove the equality of the debits and credits in the general ledger accounts after making all end-of-period adjustments.
Income Statement columns
The work sheet columns that show the amounts that will be reported in the income statement.