Chapter 3
true
T or F: a calculator tape is the source document for daily cash sales
true
T or F: a complete journal entry consists of the date, the debit amount, the credit amount, and a source document
true
T or F: a general journal page is complete when there is insufficient space to record any more entries
true
T or F: a receipt is the source document for cash received from transactions other than sales
false
T or F: every business uses the same journal to record transactions
true
T or F: in double entry accounting, each transaction affects at least two accounts
true
T or F: the source document for all cash payments is a check
false
T or F: to correct an error in a journal, one can simply erase the incorrect item and write the correct item
true
T or F: transactions are recorded in a journal in chronological order
false
T or F: when an entry in an amount column is an even dollar amount, either "00" or "--" can be entered in the cents column
receipt
a business form giving written acknowledgement for cash received
check
a business form ordering a bank to pay cash from a bank account
source document
a business paper from which information is obtained for a journal entry
invoice
a form describing the goods or services sold, the quantity, the price, and the terms of sale
journal
a form for recording transactions in chronological order
memorandum
a form on which a brief message is written to describe a transaction
sales invoice
an invoice used as a source document for recording a sale on account
entry
information for each transaction recorded in a journal
journalizing
recording transactions in a journal
double entry accounting
the recording of debit and credit parts of a transaction