n
Abbreviation of account. [(accounting) A registry of pecuniary transactions; a written or printed statement of business dealings or debts and credits, and also of other things subjected to a reckoning or review.]
n
Abbreviation of account. [(accounting) A registry of pecuniary transactions; a written or printed statement of business dealings or debts and credits, and also of other things subjected to a reckoning or review.]
n
(accounting) Abbreviation of account. [(accounting) A registry of pecuniary transactions; a written or printed statement of business dealings or debts and credits, and also of other things subjected to a reckoning or review.]
n
(obsolete) An accountant.
n
Obsolete form of accomptant. [(obsolete) An accountant.]
n
(accounting) A book in which accounts are kept; ledger.
n
(business) An account designator, especially one that is not purely numeric.
n
Individual required to maintain accounting, including records thereof, of property and funds, whether public or quasi-public. The accountable officer may or may not have physical possession of the property or funds.
n
(uncountable, Britain, New Zealand, accounting) The function of compiling and providing financial information primarily by reports referred to as financial statements, including bookkeeping, systems design, analysis and interpretation of accounting information.
n
(accounting) One whose profession includes organizing, maintaining and auditing the records of another. The records are usually, but not always, financial records.
n
A person providing an accounting of expenditure or other actions.
n
(business) The development and use of a system for recording and analyzing the financial transactions and financial status of an individual or a business.
n
A regular period of time, as a month, quarter, or year, for which an operative statement is drawn up.
n
Abbreviation of account. [(accounting) A registry of pecuniary transactions; a written or printed statement of business dealings or debts and credits, and also of other things subjected to a reckoning or review.]
n
(accounting) A journal entry made to ensure that some financial activity is assigned to the posting period in which the activity occurred.
n
(accounting) The complete accounting record for a fiscal year.
n
(accounting) The interrelation and congruence of the flow of data between financial statements of an entity, especially between the income statement and balance sheet.
n
The result of such an examination, or an account as adjusted by auditors; final account.
n
A formal, often computerized record or log of the financial transactions of an organization or system.
n
One who audits bookkeeping accounts.
n
(business, accounting) The four largest global auditing firms, comprising Deloitte, Ernst & Young, KPMG, and PricewaterhouseCoopers.
n
A record book in which all transactions (or all of a certain class) of a business are recorded and from entries are made in accounting records such as the general ledger or subsidiary ledgers.
n
Synonym of book of original entry (“kind of record book in accounting”)
n
Alternative spelling of bookkeeper [(accounting) A person responsible for keeping records or documents, such as of a business.]
n
Alternative spelling of bookkeeping [(accounting) The skill or practice of keeping books or systematic records of financial transactions, e.g. income and expenses.]
n
(accounting) The skill or practice of keeping books or systematic records of financial transactions, e.g. income and expenses.
n
(accounting) Accounting records.
n
Accounting work; book keeping.
v
(obsolete, accounting) To perform basic bookkeeping.
n
a qualified accountant with an official statutory title
n
An accountant who has met certain legal requirements to provide certain accounting services.
n
(accounting) A list of financial accounts set up, usually by an accountant, for an organization, and available for use by the bookkeeper for recording transactions in the organization's general ledger.
n
(accountancy) A member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants
n
(obsolete) account; reckoning; computation
n
A duplicate book, register, or account, kept to correct or check another account or register.
n
(business) The chief accounting officer which audits, and manages the financial affairs of a company or government; a comptroller.
n
(historical) A book containing the names and shares of the joint speculators in a mining enterprise.
n
the part of a cheque that is retained in the chequebook as a record; a stub
n
(business, euphemistic, sometimes humorous) Financial accounting practices which are usually not explicitly illegal, but which are unorthodox, imaginative, usually misleading, and of questionable ethics.
n
In bookkeeping, an entry in the left hand column of an account.
adj
(accounting) Describing a method of bookkeeping in which each transaction is entered in two accounts, for debits and for credits.
n
(accounting) The date when a transaction (that is, an allocation of funds) appears in an account.
n
Abbreviation of equipment. [The act of equipping, or the state of being equipped, as for a voyage or expedition.]
n
The field of accounting concerned with the summary, analysis and reporting of financial transactions related to a business.
n
A formal record of all relevant financial information of a business, person, or other entity, presented in a structured and standardized manner to allow easy understanding.
n
(accounting) A page in an account book; sometimes, two opposite pages bearing the same serial number.
n
(finance) financial planning and accounting / analysis
n
(business, accounting) The central accounting record of a company or organization consisting of the accounts that support the value items shown in the major financial statements.
n
(accounting, business) A journal to adjust inventory in connection with purchases, sales, and positive and negative adjustments.
n
(accounting) A general journal.
n
(accounting) The act of recording in a journal.
n
(accounting) A collection of accounting entries consisting of credits and debits.
n
A branch of accounting concerned with providing financial information to the management of organisations to support decision making.
n
(accounting, business) A general ledger
n
A book or ledger that lists customer orders, especially orders that have not yet been filled.
n
(dated) A book that passes between a trader and a customer, used to record credit purchases.
n
(accounting) A system of assessing a business' inventory in which updates are made on a periodic basis, so that a completely accurate account is only available immediately after the update.
v
(accounting) To carry (an account) from the journal to the ledger.
n
(accounting, business) A specialized accounting journal and also a prime entry book used in an accounting system to keep track of the orders of items placed using accounts payable.
n
An account, or formal report, of an action performed, of a duty discharged, of facts or statistics, etc.; especially, in the plural, a set of tabulated statistics prepared for general information.
n
(accounting, business) A specialized accounting journal and also a prime entry book used in an accounting system to record the sales of items by customers.
n
(accounting) A ledger of sales. More correctly referred to as accounts receivable.
adj
(accounting) Describing a method of bookkeeping that relies on a one-sided accounting entry to maintain financial information, with each entry appearing only once on one side or other of the account.
n
(accounting) A type of accounting record used to enter business activity not involving money changing hands.
n
(accounting) A statement of the balances of all nominal accounts in a double-entry ledger, made to test their equality. The total value of the debits should equal the total of the credits any difference indicates that an error has been made.
n
(business) A document that records the evidence used in preparing an audit.
n
(accounting) An adjustment; a precise amount adjusted by an act of writing down or entering an asset and its value; a reduction of an asset, written down or otherwise recorded as such.
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