Class 11 Accountancy Recording of Transactions – I Notes

Class 11 Accountancy Notes

Chapter Overview

This chapter explains how business transactions are identified, analyzed, recorded, and posted into accounting books. It introduces source documents, accounting vouchers, accounting equation, debit-credit rules, journal, and ledger.


1. Business Transactions

Meaning

A business transaction is an economic event that affects the financial position of a business and can be measured in money.

Features

  • Involves exchange of value.
  • Has monetary effect.
  • Affects at least two accounts.
  • Can be recorded in accounting books.

Example

  • Purchase of goods
  • Sale of goods
  • Payment of rent
  • Receipt of cash

Dual Aspect Concept

Every transaction has two aspects:

  • Giving aspect
  • Receiving aspect

Example:
Purchase of furniture for cash:

  • Furniture received
  • Cash given

2. Source Documents

Meaning

Documents that provide evidence of business transactions are called source documents.

Examples

  • Cash Memo
  • Invoice
  • Sales Bill
  • Cheque
  • Pay-in-slip
  • Salary Slip
  • Receipt

Importance

  • Proof of transaction
  • Basis of recording
  • Helps in auditing
  • Provides authenticity

3. Voucher

Meaning

A voucher is a written document supporting a transaction.

Types of Vouchers

A. Transaction Voucher

Used when:

  • One account is debited
  • One account is credited

B. Debit Voucher

Used when:

  • Multiple accounts are debited
  • One account is credited

C. Credit Voucher

Used when:

  • One account is debited
  • Multiple accounts are credited

D. Journal Voucher

Used for complex transactions involving:

  • Multiple debits
  • Multiple credits

4. Essential Elements of a Voucher

A voucher should contain:

  1. Name of business
  2. Voucher number
  3. Date
  4. Debit account
  5. Credit account
  6. Amount
  7. Narration
  8. Signature of preparer
  9. Signature of authorized person

5. Accounting Equation

Meaning

Accounting Equation shows the relationship between Assets, Liabilities and Capital.

Formula

Assets = Liabilities + Capital

Alternative Forms

Capital = Assets – Liabilities

Liabilities = Assets – Capital

Importance

  • Basis of double-entry system.
  • Helps in preparing Balance Sheet.
  • Always remains balanced.

6. Elements of Accounting Equation

Assets

Resources owned by business.

Examples:

  • Cash
  • Bank Balance
  • Furniture
  • Machinery
  • Building
  • Debtors

Liabilities

Amounts payable by business.

Examples:

  • Creditors
  • Bank Loan
  • Outstanding Expenses

Capital

Owner’s investment in business.

Examples:

  • Cash introduced by owner
  • Additional capital introduced

Effect of Transactions on Accounting Equation

Transaction 1

Owner starts business with ₹5,00,000 cash.

Effect:

  • Assets increase ₹5,00,000
  • Capital increase ₹5,00,000

Transaction 2

Cash deposited into bank.

Effect:

  • Cash decreases
  • Bank increases
  • Total assets unchanged

Transaction 3

Furniture purchased by cheque.

Effect:

  • Furniture increases
  • Bank decreases

Transaction 4

Goods purchased on credit.

Effect:

  • Assets increase
  • Liabilities increase

Transaction 5

Goods sold at profit.

Effect:

  • Debtors/Cash increase
  • Capital increases due to profit

7. Debit and Credit

Meaning

Debit (Dr.)Credit (Cr.)
Left side of accountRight side of account

T-Account Format

Account Name

Debit Side | Credit Side

8. Rules of Debit and Credit

Asset Accounts

ChangeTreatment
IncreaseDebit
DecreaseCredit

Examples

  • Cash received → Debit Cash
  • Cash paid → Credit Cash

Liability Accounts

ChangeTreatment
IncreaseCredit
DecreaseDebit

Examples

  • Loan taken → Credit Loan
  • Loan repaid → Debit Loan

Capital Accounts

ChangeTreatment
IncreaseCredit
DecreaseDebit

Examples

  • Capital introduced → Credit Capital
  • Drawings → Debit Capital

Revenue/Gain Accounts

ChangeTreatment
IncreaseCredit
DecreaseDebit

Examples

  • Sales → Credit Sales
  • Commission Received → Credit Commission

Expense/Loss Accounts

ChangeTreatment
IncreaseDebit
DecreaseCredit

Examples

  • Rent Paid → Debit Rent
  • Salary Paid → Debit Salary

Quick Memory Chart

Account TypeIncreaseDecrease
AssetsDebitCredit
LiabilitiesCreditDebit
CapitalCreditDebit
RevenueCreditDebit
ExpensesDebitCredit

9. Books of Original Entry

Meaning

Books where transactions are recorded first are called Books of Original Entry.

Examples

  1. Journal Proper
  2. Cash Book
  3. Purchase Book
  4. Sales Book
  5. Purchase Return Book
  6. Sales Return Book
  7. Bills Receivable Book
  8. Bills Payable Book

10. Journal

Meaning

Journal is the book of original entry where transactions are recorded in chronological order.

Process

Recording transactions in journal is called Journalising.


Format of Journal

DateParticularsL.F.Debit (₹)Credit (₹)

Important Terms in Journal

Date

Date of transaction.

Particulars

Accounts affected.

L.F. (Ledger Folio)

Ledger page reference.

Narration

Brief explanation of transaction.


Rules of Journal Entry

  1. Debit account written first.
  2. Credit account written second with “To”.
  3. Narration written below.
  4. Debit amount equals credit amount.

Simple Journal Entry

Meaning

Entry involving one debit and one credit account.

Example:

Goods purchased on credit ₹30,000

Purchases A/c Dr.      30,000
To Creditor A/c 30,000

Compound Journal Entry

Meaning

Entry involving more than two accounts.

Example:

Furniture purchased ₹25,000.
₹5,000 paid in cash and balance on credit.

Furniture A/c Dr.      25,000
To Cash A/c 5,000
To Creditor A/c 20,000

11. Ledger

Meaning

Ledger is the principal book containing all individual accounts.

Purpose

  • Classifies transactions account-wise.
  • Shows balance of each account.
  • Helps in preparation of Trial Balance.

Format of Ledger

DateParticularsJ.F.Amount

Debit side and Credit side are maintained separately.


Utility of Ledger

  1. Shows account balances.
  2. Provides classified information.
  3. Helps locate customer balances.
  4. Helps prepare final accounts.

12. Posting

Meaning

Transferring entries from Journal to Ledger is called Posting.

Steps in Posting

  1. Locate account in ledger.
  2. Enter date.
  3. Write corresponding account name.
  4. Enter journal folio number.
  5. Enter amount.
  6. Repeat for credit side.

Classification of Ledger Accounts

Permanent Accounts

Remain open year after year.

Examples:

  • Assets
  • Liabilities
  • Capital

Shown in Balance Sheet.


Temporary Accounts

Closed at year-end.

Examples:

  • Expenses
  • Revenues

Transferred to Trading and Profit & Loss Account.


Difference Between Journal and Ledger

BasisJournalLedger
MeaningBook of original entryPrincipal book
RecordingFirst recordingSecond recording
OrderChronologicalAccount-wise
ProcessJournalisingPosting
PurposeRecord transactionsClassify transactions

Important Exam Definitions

Business Transaction

An economic event affecting business finances and recorded in books.

Source Document

Documentary evidence of a business transaction.

Voucher

A document supporting a transaction.

Accounting Equation

Assets = Liabilities + Capital.

Journal

Book of original entry.

Ledger

Principal book containing all accounts.

Posting

Transfer of journal entries to ledger.

Narration

Brief explanation of a transaction in journal.

Debit

Left side of an account.

Credit

Right side of an account.


One-Page Revision

Accounting Equation

Assets = Liabilities + Capital

Debit-Credit Rules

AccountIncreaseDecrease
AssetDrCr
LiabilityCrDr
CapitalCrDr
RevenueCrDr
ExpenseDrCr

Flow of Recording

Transaction → Source Document → Voucher → Journal → Ledger

Key Terms

  • Journalising = Recording in Journal
  • Posting = Transfer to Ledger
  • Journal = Book of Original Entry
  • Ledger = Principal Book

Comprehensive Question Bank


Part A: Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)

Business Transactions & Source Documents

  1. Which of the following is a business transaction?
    a) Owner’s birthday celebration
    b) Purchase of furniture for office
    c) Family picnic
    d) Personal shopping

Answer: b

  1. A transaction must be expressed in:
    a) Goods
    b) Services
    c) Money
    d) Labour

Answer: c

  1. Which document is prepared by the seller for credit sales?
    a) Debit Note
    b) Invoice
    c) Voucher
    d) Receipt

Answer: b

  1. Cash Memo is issued when goods are sold:
    a) On credit
    b) For cash
    c) On approval
    d) On consignment

Answer: b

  1. A cheque counterfoil serves as:
    a) Receipt
    b) Source document
    c) Ledger
    d) Voucher

Answer: b


Accounting Equation

  1. The accounting equation is:
    a) Assets = Capital
    b) Assets = Liabilities + Capital
    c) Capital = Assets + Liabilities
    d) Assets – Capital = Profit

Answer: b

  1. Which of the following increases capital?
    a) Loss
    b) Drawings
    c) Additional Capital
    d) Expenses

Answer: c

  1. Drawings reduce:
    a) Assets
    b) Capital
    c) Liabilities
    d) Sales

Answer: b

  1. Purchase of machinery for cash:
    a) Increases assets and liabilities
    b) Decreases capital
    c) Changes composition of assets
    d) Increases capital

Answer: c

  1. Credit purchase of goods increases:
    a) Capital
    b) Assets and liabilities
    c) Assets only
    d) Liabilities only

Answer: b


Rules of Debit and Credit

  1. Increase in an asset account is:
    a) Credited
    b) Debited
    c) Ignored
    d) Adjusted

Answer: b

  1. Increase in liability is:
    a) Debited
    b) Credited
    c) Closed
    d) Adjusted

Answer: b

  1. Increase in expenses is:
    a) Credited
    b) Debited
    c) Adjusted
    d) Transferred

Answer: b

  1. Increase in income is:
    a) Debited
    b) Credited
    c) Closed
    d) Ignored

Answer: b

  1. Rent paid is:
    a) Income
    b) Asset
    c) Expense
    d) Liability

Answer: c


Journal

  1. Journal is known as:
    a) Principal Book
    b) Book of Original Entry
    c) Ledger
    d) Cash Book

Answer: b

  1. Recording transactions in Journal is called:
    a) Posting
    b) Balancing
    c) Journalising
    d) Casting

Answer: c

  1. Which column contains debit amount?
    a) Particulars
    b) Date
    c) L.F.
    d) Debit Amount

Answer: d

  1. Narration is written:
    a) Above entry
    b) Below entry
    c) Side of entry
    d) Last page

Answer: b

  1. Compound Journal Entry affects:
    a) One account
    b) Two accounts
    c) More than two accounts
    d) No account

Answer: c


Ledger

  1. Ledger is known as:
    a) Book of Final Entry
    b) Book of Original Entry
    c) Voucher
    d) Source Document

Answer: a

  1. Transfer of journal entries into ledger is called:
    a) Posting
    b) Journalising
    c) Balancing
    d) Recording

Answer: a

  1. Ledger contains:
    a) Accounts
    b) Vouchers
    c) Bills
    d) Receipts

Answer: a

  1. Ledger Folio stands for:
    a) Ledger page reference
    b) Cash balance
    c) Debit amount
    d) Credit amount

Answer: a

  1. Personal Account belongs to:
    a) Person
    b) Property
    c) Expense
    d) Income

Answer: a


Part B: Fill in the Blanks

  1. A business transaction must be measurable in ________.
    Answer: Money
  2. The accounting equation is Assets = ________ + Capital.
    Answer: Liabilities
  3. Journal is the book of ________ entry.
    Answer: Original
  4. Recording transactions in Journal is called ________.
    Answer: Journalising
  5. Transfer of entries from Journal to Ledger is called ________.
    Answer: Posting
  6. An increase in assets is ________.
    Answer: Debited
  7. An increase in liabilities is ________.
    Answer: Credited
  8. Drawings decrease the owner’s ________.
    Answer: Capital
  9. A ________ note is issued for goods returned.
    Answer: Debit
  10. Ledger is the book of ________ entry.
    Answer: Final

Part C: True or False

  1. Every event is a business transaction.
    False
  2. Cash memo is a source document.
    True
  3. Drawings increase capital.
    False
  4. Journal is the book of original entry.
    True
  5. Ledger is the principal book of accounts.
    True
  6. Debit means increase in all accounts.
    False
  7. Capital account has a credit balance.
    True
  8. Posting is done from Journal to Ledger.
    True
  9. Narration explains a journal entry.
    True
  10. Assets are resources owned by the business.
    True

Part D: Match the Following

Column AColumn B
JournalBook of Original Entry
LedgerBook of Final Entry
InvoiceCredit Sale
Cash MemoCash Sale
PostingJournal to Ledger
Debit NotePurchase Return
Credit NoteSales Return
DrawingsReduction in Capital
AssetResource
LiabilityObligation

Part E: One Word Answers

  1. Book of Original Entry → Journal
  2. Book of Final Entry → Ledger
  3. Return of goods to supplier → Purchase Return
  4. Money withdrawn by owner → Drawings
  5. Resources owned by business → Assets
  6. Amount payable to outsiders → Liabilities
  7. Explanation below journal entry → Narration
  8. Recording in journal → Journalising
  9. Transfer to ledger → Posting
  10. Proof of transaction → Voucher

Part F: Very Short Answer Questions

  1. Define a business transaction.
  2. What is a source document?
  3. What is a voucher?
  4. What is an invoice?
  5. What is a cash memo?
  6. Define asset.
  7. Define liability.
  8. What is capital?
  9. What is drawings?
  10. What is a journal?
  11. What is journalising?
  12. What is narration?
  13. What is ledger?
  14. What is posting?
  15. State the accounting equation.

Part G: Short Answer Questions

  1. Explain the meaning of source documents.
  2. Discuss the importance of vouchers.
  3. Explain the accounting equation with examples.
  4. Differentiate between assets and liabilities.
  5. Explain the rules of debit and credit.
  6. Describe the format of a journal.
  7. Explain the process of journalising.
  8. What is posting? Explain its steps.
  9. Differentiate between Journal and Ledger.
  10. Explain compound journal entries.

Part H: Long Answer Questions

  1. Explain the accounting equation and its significance with examples.
  2. Describe different source documents used in accounting.
  3. Explain the rules of debit and credit with illustrations.
  4. Explain the format and preparation of Journal.
  5. Describe the process of posting journal entries into ledger accounts.
  6. Differentiate between Journal and Ledger in detail.
  7. Explain the classification of accounts with suitable examples.

Part I: Practical Journal Entry Questions

Journalise the following:

  1. Started business with cash ₹1,00,000.
  2. Purchased goods for cash ₹20,000.
  3. Purchased furniture on credit from Mohan ₹10,000.
  4. Sold goods for cash ₹15,000.
  5. Sold goods on credit to Ramesh ₹12,000.
  6. Paid rent ₹2,000.
  7. Received commission ₹1,500.
  8. Withdrew cash for personal use ₹3,000.
  9. Paid Mohan ₹5,000.
  10. Received cash from Ramesh ₹10,000.

Part I: Practical Journal Entry Questions – Complete Answers

1. Started business with cash ₹1,00,000

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Cash A/c Dr.1,00,000
To Capital A/c1,00,000
(Being business started with cash)

2. Purchased goods for cash ₹20,000

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Purchases A/c Dr.20,000
To Cash A/c20,000
(Being goods purchased for cash)

3. Purchased furniture on credit from Mohan ₹10,000

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Furniture A/c Dr.10,000
To Mohan A/c10,000
(Being furniture purchased on credit from Mohan)

4. Sold goods for cash ₹15,000

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Cash A/c Dr.15,000
To Sales A/c15,000
(Being goods sold for cash)

5. Sold goods on credit to Ramesh ₹12,000

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Ramesh A/c Dr.12,000
To Sales A/c12,000
(Being goods sold on credit to Ramesh)

6. Paid rent ₹2,000

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Rent A/c Dr.2,000
To Cash A/c2,000
(Being rent paid)

7. Received commission ₹1,500

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Cash A/c Dr.1,500
To Commission A/c1,500
(Being commission received)

8. Withdrew cash for personal use ₹3,000

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Drawings A/c Dr.3,000
To Cash A/c3,000
(Being cash withdrawn for personal use)

9. Paid Mohan ₹5,000

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Mohan A/c Dr.5,000
To Cash A/c5,000
(Being amount paid to Mohan)

10. Received cash from Ramesh ₹10,000

ParticularsDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Cash A/c Dr.10,000
To Ramesh A/c10,000
(Being cash received from Ramesh)