A simple journal entry consists of two debits and one credit. - False
A credit entry to an expense account will increase it. - False
The process of recording a transaction in a journal is called journalizing. - True
Amounts entered on the left side of an account, regardless of the account titles, are
called credits or charges to the account. - False
The accounting cycle begins with the recording of the transactions and ends with the
preparation of the financial statements. - False
Double posting of a transaction causes the debits and credits not to balance. - False
The journal entry may include debits to more than one account and credits to more than
one account but the total of the debits must always equal to the total of the credits. -
True
A business bought a photocopier for office use. The payment was recorded in the
Photocopying Expense. - False
Notes receivable are claims against debtors evidenced by a written promise to pay a
certain sum of money at a definite time to the order of a specified person or the bearer. -
True
The chart of accounts is a system of organizing and numbering the accounts in the
general ledger. - True
A trial balance may balance but may not be correct. - True
Posting refers to the process of transferring the debit and the credit amounts from the
journals to the ledger accounts. - True
Dates of transactions are included in the trial balance. - False
The transposition error means a posting of a journal entry to the wrong ledger account. -
False
The sequence of the account titles in a trial balance depends upon the size of the
account balances. - False
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