Excerpt from I. C. S. Reference Library<br/><br/>In some sets of books, double entry is combined with single entry to the extent that accounts are kept with Merchandise, Expenses, Freight, and Wages, for the purpose of showing how much merchandise was bought and sold 'and how much was paid out for expense. When such accounts are kept, they are simply balanced and ruled 06 at the time of closing the books for any business period. In double-entry bookkeeping an account is kept with every class of property dealt in and with Expense, etc., as well as with every person dealt with. A debit and credit entry is made for every transaction, thus making an entry to two or more accounts, according to the number affected by the transaction; that is to say, every time an account is debited, some other account must be credited for the same amount, hence the term double entry....
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