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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Financial Accounting Vocab
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Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
business-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The inventory method that increases the inventory account with every purchase and lowers the inventory with every sale.
Inventory
Perpetual inventory method
Sales
operating cycle
2. Money is 'expensed' if it is gone forever - if there remains no useful asset as a result of the spending. The opposite is CAPITALIZED
Percentage Analysis
Net Income
Expensed
Expenses
3. The amount borrowed - or the principal. Interest-bearing notes show the present value as the face amount
present value of a note
Face interest
Accelerated depr method
Contra Account
4. The 12 month period a business used to report the results of its operatons
fiscal year
Direct method
Net
Draw (Withdrawl)
5. Usual method - starts with NI and uses the changes in the A&L accounts to adjust NI into cash flow from operations
Indirect method
fiscal year
Accumulated Depreciation
Capital
6. Where cash came from and where it went - Cash flow from operations - cash flow from investing activities - cash flow from financing activities - calculation of (1) net cash flow - and (2) cash - end of period
Cash Flow Statement
Percentage Analysis
Indirect method
Capital
7. Accounts that explain why assets went down from operations
Chart of Accounts
Draw (Withdrawl)
Expenses
liabilities
8. A supply of items a business has on hand
Contra-asset account
Account
Inventory
Weighted average
9. Money is 'expensed' if it is gone forever - if there remains no useful assert as a result of the spending. THe opposite of capitalized. `
Draw (Withdrawl)
Net income
unrealized gain/loss
Expensed
10. Accounts that explain why assets went up from operations
Capitalized
Sales
Income
Account
11. Money that the owner takes from the business or money in the business account that the owner spends on personal bills.
Draw (Withdrawl)
MACRS
Perpetual inventory method
Inventory
12. The financial report that shows the result of biz operations over a period of time
Assets
Income statement
owners equity
interest-bearing note
13. Assets that can be used to pay current liabilities
Periodic inventory method
Transportation expense
current assets
Face amount
14. Outsders to whom the business owes money
Periodic inventory method
creditors
T-account
Income statement
15. Assets that help a business or person make money
Perpetual inventory method
Capital
Net income
Statement of Owners Equity
16. The amount of long-lived assets used up during operations
Contra Account
Depreciation Expense
Periodic inventory method
Depreciable cost
17. Calc cash flow from opeations that does not start with NI - but does show cash-in cash-out cat. `
Direct method
Travel Expense
Depreciation Expense
Weighted average
18. When numbers are 'netted' they combine so that the negative numbers get subtracted from the positive numbers
Capitalized
Discount a note
Account
Netted
19. The financial report that shows the result of business operations over a period of time
Weighted average
Income Statement
Expensed
T-account
20. A note with an interest rate written on the face - whose face amount is the present value
Discount a note
Transportation expense
interest-bearing note
Net
21. Debts that must be paid within one year or one operating cycle - whichever is longer
Accumulated Depreciation
current liabilities
Income Statement
Draw (Withdrawl)
22. A financial statement that calculates an end-of-period balance of the owner's equity account
Net
Statement of Owners Equity
T-account
Sales
23. The cost the the biz of the goods it sells
owners equity
Cost of goods sold
Accelerated depr method
Account
24. That porition of the business the owner gets to keep after paying all creditors
Capitalized
T-account
Perpetual inventory method
owners equity
25. An income account that explains the increase in business assets as a result of selling goods
operating cycle
Sales
fiscal year
Indirect method
26. Recorded the cost as an asset
Indirect method
Capitalized
Expensed
Balance sheet
27. The cost of business airplane fairs - trains and long-distance buses
Transportation expense
Direct method
Indirect method
T-account
28. Debts owned to people outside the company
liabilities
Cost of goods sold
current assets
Income Statement
29. The inventory method that keeps track of merchandise costs in various purchases and contra-purchases accounts and then computes cost of goods sold on the income statement. Inventory on the books is adjusted only at year-end.
Periodic inventory method
Face interest
MACRS
Perpetual inventory method
30. A tool to keep track of the ops and downs in account. The ups go on one side of the T and the downs go on the other
T-account
Contra Account
Cost of goods sold
Income Statement
31. Modified accelerated cost recovery syste - for which IRS tables tell the rate by which to multiply an assets historical cost
Expensed
MACRS
Face amount
Income
32. Asset has not been sold but a gain or loss has occurred
unrealized gain/loss
Cost of goods sold
Face interest
Depreciation Expense
33. When money is changed into another asset that helps the business make money
Capitalized
Chart of Accounts
interest-bearing note
Weighted average
34. Method of journalizing and posting accounts at the same time by recording transac vertically in columns
Cost of goods sold
Expensed
Income statement
Vertical Journal Entries
35. The interest rate written on the face of a note
Vertical Journal Entries
Expenses
Face interest
Account
36. A place on the financial books to keep track of financial info that the owners want to know
Vertical Journal Entries
Account
Statement of Owners Equity
Discount a note
37. A word that means a subtraction has occured
Transportation expense
future value of a note
Vertical Journal Entries
Net
38. The cost of living while away from home of business
Contra-asset account
liabilities
Travel Expense
Vertical Journal Entries
39. Non-operating exp or revenues come from transactions that are not part of normal biz operations
Net income
future value of a note
Weighted average
Non-operating
40. To sell a note to a bank that subtracts a discount - giving the seller the proceeds`
Accumulated Depreciation
Discount a note
Net income
Capitalized
41. The inventory system that averages the cost of all items in inventory and assigns that averaged cost the the items sold.
Inventory
Accumulated Depreciation
Chart of Accounts
Weighted average
42. The amount of the historical cost of an asset that gets allocated over the useful life of the asset
present value of a note
Netted
Chart of Accounts
Depreciable cost
43. The official list of all business accounts
Expenses
Chart of Accounts
Vertical Journal Entries
Capitalized
44. Income-expenses
Account
Face amount
Indirect method
Net income
45. The dollar amount written on the face of the note
interest-bearing note
Transportation expense
current liabilities
Face amount
46. An account that gets subtracted from its related account. Contra accounts always get reported as negative numbers.
Capitalized
Cost of goods sold
Direct method
Contra Account
47. The financial report that shows business assets - liabilities - and the owners equity on a particular day
Chart of Accounts
Netted
Balance sheet
Inventory
48. The amount borrowed plus the interest up to a maturity date
Net
Assets
future value of a note
operating cycle
49. Income - Expenses = Net Income
Depreciation Expense
Inventory
Expensed
Net Income
50. A financial statement analysis technique in which one number is assigned 100% and all other numbers are expressed as a percentage of the first number. In balance sheets. the key number is total assets. In income statements - the key # is sales.
creditors
Percentage Analysis
Direct method
Face interest