Betekenis van:
accounting entry

accounting entry
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • onderdeel v.e. begroting
  • a written record of a commercial transaction

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

Hyponiemen

accounting entry
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • bedrag in boekhouding
  • a written record of a commercial transaction

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

Hyponiemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. Do you do double-entry accounting or traditional governmental accounting?
  2. At trade date no on-balance sheet accounting entry is made
  3. The accounting officer shall be responsible for the monitoring and entry in the accounts of payments by the Member States and other revenue.
  4. Gains and losses arising from sales are considered as realised at settlement date. At trade date no on-balance sheet accounting entry is made
  5. Upon actual recovery of the sum due, the accounting officer shall make an entry in the accounts and shall inform the authorising officer responsible.
  6. In order to set the book in line with the reality an accounting entry can be made using the IC Code ‘R5’.
  7. For the NCBs: net liability related to the application of the banknote allocation key i.e. including the ECB's banknote issue related intra-Eurosystem balances, the compensatory amount and its balancing accounting entry as defined by Decision ECB/2001/16
  8. Book-entry system: an accounting system that permits the transfer of securities and other financial assets without the physical movement of paper documents or certificates (e.g. the electronic transfer of securities).
  9. Book-entry system: an accounting system that permits the transfer of securities and other financial assets without the physical movement of paper documents or certificates (e.g. the electronic transfer of securities). See also dematerialisation.
  10. Any such entry in the file of the payee's legal and bank account details or modification of those details shall be based on a supporting document, the form of which shall be defined by the Commission's accounting officer.’
  11. For the NCBs: net claim related to the application of the banknote allocation key i.e. including the ECB’s banknote issue related intra-Eurosystem balances, the compensatory amount and its balancing accounting entry as defined by Decision ECB/2001/16 on the allocation of monetary income of the national central banks of participating Member States from the financial year 2002
  12. Bilateral procedures include operations executed through stock exchanges or market agents. Book-entry system: an accounting system that permits the transfer of securities and other financial assets without the physical movement of paper documents or certificates (e.g. the electronic transfer of securities). See also dematerialisation.
  13. For the NCBs: net claim related to the application of the banknote allocation key i.e. including the ECB's banknote issue related intra-Eurosystem balances, the compensatory amount and its balancing accounting entry as defined by Decision ECB/2001/16 on the allocation of monetary income of the national central banks of participating Member States from the financial year 2002
  14. Bilateral procedures include operations executed through stock exchanges or market agents. Book-entry system: an accounting system that permits the transfer of securities and other financial assets without the physical movement of paper documents or certificates (e.g. the electronic transfer of securities). See also dematerialisation. Central securities depository (CSD): an entity which holds and administers securities or other financial assets, holds the issuance accounts, and enables transactions to be processed by book entry. Assets may exist either physically (but immobilised within the CSD) or in a dematerialised form (i.e. only as electronic records).
  15. For the NCBs: net claim related to the application of the banknote allocation key i.e. including the ECB’s banknote issue related intra-Eurosystem balances, the compensatory amount and its balancing accounting entry as defined by Decision ECB/2001/16 of 6 December 2001 on the allocation of monetary income of the national central banks of participating Member States from the financial year 2002 [5]For the ECB: claims related to the ECB’s banknote issue, according to Decision ECB/2001/15