Loose Leaf for Fundamental Accounting Principles
Loose Leaf for Fundamental Accounting Principles
23rd Edition
ISBN: 9781259687709
Author: John J Wild, Ken Shaw Accounting Professor, Barbara Chiappetta Fundamental Accounting Principles
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
bartleby

Concept explainers

bartleby

Videos

Question
Book Icon
Chapter 7, Problem 2BPSB
To determine

Journals:

Journals are the books where all the original entries of business transactions are recorded on basis of its occurrence order and date.

Sales Journal:

The journal where all the credit sales of merchandise are recorded is called a Sales Journal.

Cash Receipts Journal:

Cash receipts journal records all type cash receipts of a business organization like cash sales, collections from debtors, loans and borrowings etc.

Accounts Receivable Subsidiary Ledger:

A subsidiary ledger of accounts receivable shows the amount of money paid and owed by debtors for the transactions made on credit individually.

Schedule of Accounts Receivable:

A schedule of accounts receivable represents the overall amount of money owed by the debtors for credit transactions during a specified period.

To determine:

1. Preparation of sales journal and cash receipts journal. Journalize the transactions that should be recorded in the sales journal and cash receipts journal.

2. Prepare the general ledger accounts and accounts receivable subsidiary ledger accounts.

3. Verify the amounts that should be posted as individual amounts from the journals have been posted. Foot and crossfoot the journals and make the month-end postings.

4. Preparation of trial balance of Acorn industries for the month ended April and Schedule of accounts receivable to prove the accuracy of the subsidiary ledgers.

Blurred answer
Students have asked these similar questions
If you have a choice, at which point will you enter into such forward contracts for hedging purposes? Would you prefer hedging against expected cashflow (before you even sign a contract with any foreign company), against firm commitment (after you have signed the contract, but before delivery of goods) or against an account payable or account receivable (after delivery of goods)? Why?
Please provide correct answer general accounting
Food shoppe galore had the following information solve this question
Knowledge Booster
Background pattern image
Accounting
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, accounting and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Recommended textbooks for you
Text book image
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING
Accounting
ISBN:9781259964947
Author:Libby
Publisher:MCG
Text book image
Accounting
Accounting
ISBN:9781337272094
Author:WARREN, Carl S., Reeve, James M., Duchac, Jonathan E.
Publisher:Cengage Learning,
Text book image
Accounting Information Systems
Accounting
ISBN:9781337619202
Author:Hall, James A.
Publisher:Cengage Learning,
Text book image
Horngren's Cost Accounting: A Managerial Emphasis...
Accounting
ISBN:9780134475585
Author:Srikant M. Datar, Madhav V. Rajan
Publisher:PEARSON
Text book image
Intermediate Accounting
Accounting
ISBN:9781259722660
Author:J. David Spiceland, Mark W. Nelson, Wayne M Thomas
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
Text book image
Financial and Managerial Accounting
Accounting
ISBN:9781259726705
Author:John J Wild, Ken W. Shaw, Barbara Chiappetta Fundamental Accounting Principles
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
Accounts Receivable and Accounts Payable; Author: The Finance Storyteller;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_aUWbQa878;License: Standard Youtube License