double entry









double entry


double entry ExamplesWord Origin noun Bookkeeping.

  1. a method in which each transaction is entered twice in the ledger, once to the debit of one account, and once to the credit of another.

Compare single entry. Origin of double entry First recorded in 1715–25 Related formsdou·ble-en·try, adjective Examples from the Web for double entry Historical Examples of double entry

  • They hold a tight rein over recreations and keep their mint-and-cumin tithes by double-entry.

    The Faith Doctor

    Edward Eggleston

  • Gladstone never allowed his religion to tint his statesmanship, and we all know businessmen who follow the double-entry scheme.

    Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great – Volume 12

    Elbert Hubbard

  • The school grounded him in double-entry bookkeeping, in commercial law, and in shorthand and typewriting.

    The Fiction Factory

    John Milton Edwards

  • There must be, of course, or where would be the use of this double-entry business?

    The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson – Swanston Edition Vol. 7 (of 25)

    Robert Louis Stevenson

  • He introduced into Boston the system of double-entry in book-keeping, in advance of any other city merchant.

    Great Fortunes, and How They Were Made

    James D. McCabe, Jr.

  • British Dictionary definitions for double entry double entry noun

      1. a book-keeping system in which any commercial transaction is entered as a debit in one account and as a credit in anotherCompare single entry
      2. (as modifier)double-entry book-keeping
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