会计英语Chapter 03
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Summary of Questions by Difficulty Level (DL) and Learning Objective (LO) True/FalseItem DL LO Item DL LO Item DL LO1.Easy C1 23.Hard C2 46.Easy P12.Easy C1 24.Hard C2 47.Easy P13.Med C1 25.Hard C2 48.Easy P14.Med C1 26.Easy C3 49.Easy P15.Easy C2 27.Easy C3 50.Easy P16.Easy C2 28.Easy C3 51.Easy P17.Easy C2 29.Easy C3 52.Med P18.Med C2 30.Easy C3 53.Med P19.Med C2 31.Med C3 54.Med P110.Med C2 32.Med C3 55.Med P111.Med C2 33.Med C3 56.Med P112.Med C2 34.Med C3 57.Hard P113.Med C2 35.Med C3 58.Hard P114.Med C2 36.Hard C3 59.Hard P115.Med C2 37.Med A1 60.Hard P116.Med C2 38.Med A1 61.Easy P217.Med C2 39.Hard A1 62.Easy P218.Med C2 40.Hard A1 63.Easy P319.Med C2 41.Easy A2 64.Easy P320.Med C2 42.Easy A2 65.Med P321.Hard C2 43.Med A2 66.Med P322.Hard C2 44.Med A2 67.Easy P445.Hard A2 68.Easy P4Multiple ChoiceItem DL LO Item DL LO Item DL LO69.Easy C1 93. Easy P1 117. Hard P170.Med C1 94. Easy P1 118. Hard P171.Med C1 95. Med P1 119. Hard P172.Med C1 96. Med P1 120. Hard P173.Med C1 97. Med P1 121. Hard P174.Easy C2 98. Med P1 122. Hard P175.Easy C2 99. Med P1 123. Hard P176.Med C2 100. Med P1 124. Hard P177.Med C2 101. Med P1 125. Hard P178.Med C2 102. Med P1 126. Hard P179.Med C2 103. Med P1 127. Hard P180.Med C2 104. Med P1 128. Hard P181.Med C2 105. Med P1 129. Hard P182.Hard C2 106. Med P1 130. Hard P183.Hard C2 107. Med P1 131. Easy P284.Med C3 108. Med P1 132. Easy P285.Med A1 109. Med P1 133. Med P286.Hard A1 110. Med P1 134. Med P287.Hard A1 111. Med P1 135. Easy P388.Hard A1 112. Med P1 136. Med P389.Easy A2 113. Med P1 137. Med P390.Easy A2 114. Med P1 138. Med P491.Med A2 115. Med P1 139. Med P492.Med A2 116. Hard P1MatchingItem DL LO Item DL LO Item DL LO 140. Med C1,C2 141. Med C1-C3 142. Med P1 P1,P2,A2 P2,P3Short EssayItem DL LO Item DL LO Item DL LO 143. Med C1 148. Hard C3 153. Hard P1 144. Med C2 149. Hard A1 154. Hard P1,P4 145. Med C2 150. Hard A2 155. Easy P2 146. Med C3 151. Easy P1 156. Easy P3 147. Med C3 152. Hard P1 157. Med ProblemsItem DL LO Item DL LO Item DL LO 158. Hard A1 169. Med P1 180. Med P1 159. Hard A1 170. Med P1 181. Hard P2 160. Hard A1 171. Med P1 182. Med P3 161. Hard A1 172. Med P1 183. Med P3 162. Med A2 173. Med P1 184. Med P3 163. Med A2 174. Med P1 185. Med P3 164. Med A2 175. Med P1 186. Med P3 165. Easy P1 176. Med P1 187. Med P3 166. Easy P1 177. Hard P1,P2 188. Med P4 167. Med P1 178. Hard P1,P2 189. Med P4 168. Med P1 179. Hard P1,P4Completion ProblemsItem DL LO Item DL LO Item DL LO 190. Med C1 196. Med C3 202. Easy P1 191. Med C2 197. Med C3 203. Easy P1 192. Med C2 198. Med C3 204. Easy P1 193. Hard C2 199. Med C3 205. Easy P1 194. Med C3 200. Hard A1 206. Med P2 195. Med C3 201. Easy A2 207. Med P3ProblemsItem DL LO Item DL LO Item DL LO208. Med C2, A1 210 Hard C2,P1,P3 212. Hard C2, P1,P3209. Med A2 211. Hard A2True / False Questions1. A company's fiscal year must correspond with the calendar year.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C12. The time period principle assumes that an organization's activities can be divided into specific time periods.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C13. Interim statements report a company's business activities for a 1-year period.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C14. A fiscal year refers to an organization's accounting period that spans twelve consecutive months or 52 weeks.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C15. Adjusting entries are made after the preparation of financial statements.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C26. Adjusting entries result in a better matching of revenues and expenses for the period. TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C27. Two main accounting principles used in accrual accounting are matching and full closure. FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C28. Adjusting entries are used to bring asset or liability accounts to their proper amount and update the related expense or revenue account.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C29. The matching principle requires that revenue not be assigned to the accounting period in which it is earned.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C210. The revenue recognition principle is the basis for making adjusting entries that pertain to unearned and accrued revenues.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C211. The cash basis of accounting commonly results in financial statements that are not comparable from period to period.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C212. Under the cash basis of accounting, no adjustments are made for prepaid, unearned, and accrued items.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C213. Since the revenue recognition principle requires that revenues be earned, there are no unearned revenues in accrual accounting.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C214. The matching principle requires that expenses get recorded in the same accounting period as the revenues that are earned as a result of the expenses, not when cash is paid.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C215. The cash basis of accounting is an accounting system in which revenues are reported when cash is received and expenses are reported when cash is paid.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C216. The cash basis of accounting recognizes revenues when cash payments from customers are received.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C217. The accrual basis of accounting recognizes revenues when cash is received from customers.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C218. The accrual basis of accounting recognized expenses when cash is paid.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C219. Recording revenues early overstates current-period income; recording revenues late understates current period income.TRUEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C220. Recording expenses early overstates current-period income; recording expenses late understates current period income.FALSEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C221. Prior to recording adjusting entries at the end of an accounting period, some accounts may not show proper financial statement amounts even though all transactions were correctly recorded.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: C222. A company paid $9,000 for a six-month insurance policy. The policy coverage began on February 1. On February 28, $150 of insurance expense must be recorded.FALSEExpense = $9,000/6 = $1,500AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: C223. On October 15, a company received $15,000 cash as a down payment on a consulting contract. The amount was credited to Unearned Consulting Revenue. By October 31, 10% of the services required by the contract were completed. The company will record consulting revenue of $1,500 from this contract for October.TRUERevenue = $15,000 x 10% = $1,500AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: C224. The accrual basis of accounting reflects the principle that revenue is recorded when it is earned, not when cash is received.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: C225. The accrual basis of accounting requires adjustments to recognize revenues in the periods they are earned and to match expenses with revenues.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: C226. Adjusting entries are designed primarily to correct accounting errors.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C327. Adjustments are necessary to bring an asset or liability account to its proper amount and also update a related expense or revenue account.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C328. Each adjusting entry can only affect a balance sheet account.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C329. Accrued expenses at the end of one accounting period are expected to result in cash payments in a future period.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C330. Accrued revenues at the end of one accounting period are expected to result in cash payments in a future period.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C331. Each adjusting entry affects only one or more income statement account and never cash. FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C332. Accrued expenses reflect transactions where cash is paid before a related expense is recognized.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C333. Under the accrual basis of accounting, adjustments are often made for prepaid expenses and unearned revenues.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C334. The entry to record a cash receipt from a customer when the service to be provided has not yet been performed involves a debit to an unearned revenue account.FALSEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C335. Costs incurred during an accounting period but that are unpaid and unrecorded are accrued expenses.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C336. An adjusting entry often includes an entry to Cash.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: C337. Before an adjusting entry is made to recognize the cost of expired insurance for the period, Prepaid Insurance and Insurance Expense are both overstated.FALSEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: A138. Before an adjusting entry is made to accrue employee salaries, Salaries Expense and Salaries Payable are both understated.TRUEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: A139. Failure to record depreciation expense will overstate the asset and understate the expense. TRUEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: A140. A company's month-end adjusting entry for Insurance Expense is $1,000. If this entry is not made then expenses are understated by $1,000 and net income is overstated by $1,000. TRUEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: A141. Profit margin can also be called return on sales.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: A242. Profit margin measures the relation of debt to assets.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: A243. Profit margin reflects the percent of profit in each dollar of revenue.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: A244. Profit margin is calculated by dividing net sales by net income.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: A245. Ben and Jerry's had total assets of $149,501,000, net income of $6,242,000, and net sales of $209,203,000. Its profit margin was 2.98%.TRUE$6,242,000/$209,203,000 = 2.98%AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: A246. A contra account is an account linked with another account; it is added to that account to show the proper amount for the item recorded in the associated account.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P147. If on January 1, 2009 a company paid $18,000 cash for one year of rent in advance and adjusting entries are made at the end of each month, the balance of Prepaid Rent as of December 1, 2009 should be $1,500.TRUE$18,000 x 1/12 = $1,500AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P148. Accumulated depreciation is shown on the balance sheet as a subtraction from the cost of its related asset.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P149. A salary owed to employees is an example of an accrued expense.TRUEAACSB: AnalyticAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P150. In accrual accounting, accrued revenues are recorded as liabilities.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P151. Depreciation expense is an example of an accrued expense.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P152. Earned but uncollected revenues are recorded during the adjusting process with a credit to a revenue and a debit to an expense.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: P153. Depreciation expense for a period is the portion of a plant asset's cost that is allocated to that period.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: P154. All plant assets, including land, eventually wear out or decline in usefulness.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: P155. Net income for a period will be overstated if accrued salaries are not recorded at the end of the accounting period.TRUEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: P156. Depreciation measures the decline in market value of an asset.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: P157. A company owes its employees $5,000 for the year ended December 31. It will pay employees on January 6 for the previous two weeks' salaries. The year-end adjusting on entry on December 31 will include a debit to Salaries Expense and a credit to Cash.FALSEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: P158. A company purchased $6,000 worth of supplies in August and recorded the purchase in the Supplies account. On August 31, the fiscal year-end, the supplies count equaled $3,200. The adjusting entry would include a $2,800 debit to Supplies.FALSEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: MeasurementDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: P159. A company performs 20 days work on a 30-day contract before the end of the year. The total contract is valued at $6,000 and payment is not due until the contract is fully completed. The adjusting entry includes a $4,000 credit to unearned revenue.FALSEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: P160. A company entered into a 2-month contract for $50,000 on April 1. It earned $25,000 of the contract services in April and billed the customer. The company should recognize the revenue when it receives the customer's check.FALSEAACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: P161. The adjusted trial balance must be prepared before the adjusting entries are made. FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P262. An unadjusted trial balance is a list of accounts and balances prepared before adjustments are recorded and posted.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P263. Financial statements can be prepared directly from the information in the adjusted trial balance.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: ReportingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P364. The report form is considered to be the only correct format for the balance sheet. FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: ReportingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P365. The account form of the balance sheet matches the accounting equation. That is, assets are on the left side of the statement, and liabilities and equity are on the right side of the statement. TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: ReportingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: P366. In preparing statements from the adjusted trial balance, the balance sheet must be prepared first.FALSEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: ReportingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: P367. It is acceptable to record prepayment of expenses as debits to expense accounts. TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P468. It is acceptable to record cash received in advance of providing products or services to revenue accounts.TRUEAACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: P4Multiple Choice Questions69. The time period principle assumes that an organization's activities can be divided into specific time periods including:A. Months.B. Quarters.C. Fiscal years.D. Calendar years.E. All of these.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C170. A broad principle that requires identifying the activities of a business with specific time periods such as months, quarters, or years is the:A. Operating cycle of a business.B. Time period principle.C. Going-concern principle.D. Matching principle.E. Accrual basis of accounting.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C171. Interim financial statements refer to financial reports:A. That cover less than one year, usually spanning one, three, or six-month periods.B. That are prepared before any adjustments have been recorded.C. That show the assets above the liabilities and the liabilities above the equity.D. Where revenues are reported on the income statement when cash is received and expenses are reported when cash is paid.E. Where the adjustment process is used to assign revenues to the periods in which they are earned and to match expenses with revenues.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C172. The 12-month period that ends when a company's activities are at their lowest point is called the:A. Fiscal year.B. Calendar year.C. Natural business year.D. Accounting period.E. Interim period.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C173. The length of time covered by a set of periodic financial statements is referred to as the:A. Fiscal cycle.B. Natural business year.C. Accounting period.D. Business cycle.E. Operating cycle.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C174. The accounting principle that requires revenue to be reported when earned is the:A. Matching principle.B. Revenue recognition principle.C. Time period principle.D. Accrual reporting principle.E. Going-concern principle.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C275. Adjusting entries:A. Affect only income statement accounts.B. Affect only balance sheet accounts.C. Affect both income statement and balance sheet accounts.D. Affect only cash flow statement accounts.E. Affect only equity accounts.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: EasyLearning Objective: C276. The main purpose of adjusting entries is to:A. Record external transactions and events.B. Record internal transactions and events.C. Recognize assets purchased during the period.D. Recognize debts paid during the period.E. Correct errors.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C277. The broad principle that requires expenses to be reported in the same period as the revenues that were earned as a result of the expenses is the:A. Recognition principle.B. Cost principle.C. Cash basis of accounting.D. Matching principle.E. Time period principle.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C278. The system of preparing financial statements based on recognizing revenues when the cash is received and reporting expenses when the cash is paid is called:A. Accrual basis accounting.B. Operating cycle accounting.C. Cash basis accounting.D. Revenue recognition accounting.E. Current basis accounting.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C279. Adjusting entries are journal entries made at the end of an accounting period for the purpose of:A. Updating liability and asset accounts to their proper balances.B. Assigning revenues to the periods in which they are earned.C. Assigning expenses to the periods in which they are incurred.D. Assuring that financial statements reflect the revenues earned and the expenses incurred.E. All of these.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C280. The approach to preparing financial statements based on recognizing revenues when they are earned and matching expenses to those revenues is:A. Cash basis accounting.B. The matching principle.C. The time period principle.D. Accrual basis accounting.E. Revenue basis accounting.AACSB: CommunicationsAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C281. Prepaid expenses, depreciation, accrued expenses, unearned revenues, and accrued revenues are all examples of:A. Items that require contra accounts.B. Items that require adjusting entries.C. Asset and equity.D. Asset accounts.E. Income statement accounts.AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C282. The accrual basis of accounting:A. Is generally accepted for external reporting because it is more useful than cash basis for most business decisions.B. Is flawed because it gives complete information about cash flows.C. Recognizes revenues when received in cash.D. Recognizes expenses when paid in cash.E. Eliminates the need for adjusting entries at the end of each period.AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: C283. Which of the following statements is incorrect?A. Adjustments to prepaid expenses, depreciation, and unearned revenues involve previously recorded assets and liabilities.B. Accrued expenses and accrued revenues involve assets and liabilities that had not previously been recorded.C. Adjusting entries can be used to record both accrued expenses and accrued revenues.D. Prepaid expenses, depreciation, and unearned revenues often require adjusting entries to record the effects of the passage of time.E. Adjusting entries affect the cash account.AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: C284. An adjusting entry could be made for each of the following except:A. Prepaid expenses.B. Depreciation.C. Owner withdrawals.D. Unearned revenues.E. Accrued revenues.AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: C385. A company made no adjusting entry for accrued and unpaid employee wages of $28,000 on December 31. This oversight would:A. Understate net income by $28,000.B. Overstate net income by $28,000.C. Have no effect on net income.D. Overstate assets by $28,000.E. Understate assets by $28,000.AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: MediumLearning Objective: A186. If a company mistakenly forgot to record depreciation on office equipment at the end of an accounting period, the financial statements prepared at that time would show:A. Assets overstated and equity understated.B. Assets and equity both understated.C. Assets overstated, net income understated, and equity overstated.D. Assets, net income, and equity understated.E. Assets, net income, and equity overstated.AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: A187. If a company failed to make the end-of-period adjustment to remove from the Unearned Management Fees account the amount of management fees that were earned, this omission would cause:A. An overstatement of net income.B. An overstatement of assets.C. An overstatement of liabilities.D. An overstatement of equity.E. An understatement of liabilities.AACSB: AnalyticAICPA BB: IndustryAICPA FN: Decision MakingDifficulty: HardLearning Objective: A1。