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100

Accounting is the process of recording, classifying, summarizing, and reporting financial transactions.

What is Accounting?

100

A statement showing account balances to ensure debits equal credits.

What is a Trial Balance?

100

Costs incurred to generate revenue.

What are Expenses?

100

Money owed to suppliers.

What is Accounts Payable?

100

Movement of cash into and out of a business.

What is Cash Flow?

200

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

What is the Accounting Equation?

200

Resources owned by a business with economic value.

What are Assets?

200

Allocation of a fixed asset's cost over its useful life.

What is Depreciation?

200

Money owed by customers.

What is Accounts Receivable?

200

Statement showing assets, liabilities, and equity.

What is a Balance Sheet?

300

Every transaction affects at least two accounts with equal debit and credit entries.

What is Double Entry Accounting?

300

Obligations or debts owed by a business.

What are Liabilities?

300

Allocation of the cost of intangible assets over time.

What is Amortization?

300

Current Assets − Current Liabilities.

What is Working Capital?

300

Goods held for sale or production.

What is Inventory?

400

The first recording of a financial transaction.

What is a Journal Entry?

400

Owner's residual interest after liabilities are deducted from assets.

What is Equity?

400

Recording revenue and expenses when earned or incurred, not when cash moves.

What is Accrual Accounting?

400

Comparing the cash book with the bank statement to identify differences.

What is Bank Reconciliation?

400

Statement showing revenue, expenses, and profit.

What is an Income Statement?

500

A book or record containing all business accounts.

What is a Ledger?

500

Income earned from normal business operations.

What is Revenue?

500

Recording transactions only when cash is received or paid.

What is Cash Accounting?

500

Independent examination of financial statements.

What is an Audit?

500

Attention to detail, analytical thinking, integrity, accuracy, and strong financial knowledge.

What Makes a Good Accountant?

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