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Decipher Accounting Journal Entries — Practice Questions

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Updated:  
2016-03-26 07:21:01
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From The Book:  
Understanding Business Accounting For Dummies - UK, 4th UK Edition
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A journal entry is a record of transactions that includes the date of each transaction, the account numbers, account names, and amounts to be debited and credited. When an accountant looks at a journal entry, she can decipher what happened in that transaction.

Here are a couple of practice questions to test whether you can translate a journal entry into English.

Practice questions

  1. A company records the following journal entry: cash, $5,000; sales revenue, $5,000. Provide a narrative description for the transaction.

  2. A company records the following journal entry: cost of goods sold, $5,000; inventory, $5,000. Provide a narrative description for the transaction.

Answers and explanations

  1. The company made a $5,000 cash sale.

    Debit to cash increases cash. Therefore, cash was received. Credit to revenues increases revenues, so a sale was made.

  2. The company sold $5,000 of product and recorded a decrease in inventory and an increase in cost of goods sold.

    Credit to inventory decreases the balance and a debit to an expense (cost of goods sold) increases the amount of the expense. Thus, the company sold $5,000 of its inventory.

If you need more practice on this and other topics from your accounting course, visit Dummies.com to purchase Accounting For Dummies! Featuring the latest information on accounting methods and standards, the information in Accounting For Dummies is valuable for anyone studying or working in the fields of accounting or finance.

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

Kenneth W. Boyd has 30 years of experience in accounting and financial services. He is a four-time Dummies book author, a blogger, and a video host on accounting and finance topics.

Kate Mooney has been teaching accounting to both undergraduates and MBA students at St. Cloud State University since 1986, after earning her PhD from Texas A & M University. She is a licensed CPA in Minnesota and is a member of the State Board of Accountancy.