Chapter 1: Terms Activity
Across
- 1. A business entity owned by two or more people who carry on a business for profit and who are legally responsible for the debts and taxes of the business
- 5. Intentional or reckless acts that result in confiscation of a firm’s assets or the misrepresentation of the firm’s accounting data
- 6. The process by which financial information about a business is recorded, classified, summarized, interpreted, and communicated to owners, managers, and other interested parties
- 7. Accounting standards developed and applied by professional accountants
- 9. One to whom money is owed
- 10. The review of financial statements to assess their fairness and adherence to generally accepted accounting principles
- 13. An independent accountant who provides accounting services to the public for a fee
- 14. Accounting work carried on by an accountant employed by a single business in industry; the branch of accounting that provides financial information about business segments, activities, or products
- 15. Anything having its own separate identity, such as an individual, a town, a university, or a business
- 16. Certificates that represent ownership of a corporation
- 17. A publicly or privately owned business entity that is separate from its owners and has a legal right to own property and do business in its own name; stockholders are not responsible for the debts or taxes of the business
Down
- 2. A service that involves tax compliance and tax planning
- 3. Members of firms that perform accounting services for other companies
- 4. Periodic reports of a firm’s financial position or operating results
- 8. A business entity owned by one person, who is legally responsible for the debts and taxes of the business
- 11. A company’s policies and procedures to safeguard assets, ensure reliability of accounting data, and promote compliance with management policies and applicable laws
- 12. A designation that assures an individual possesses the level of knowledge and skill needed to carry out all key functions through the adjusted trial balance, including payroll