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"daybook" Definitions
  1. DIARY, JOURNAL

47 Sentences With "daybook"

How to use daybook in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "daybook" and check conjugation/comparative form for "daybook". Mastering all the usages of "daybook" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Over the summer I read Anne Truitt's Daybook and Tony Kushner's Angels in America and was bowled over by both of them.
But while Facetune and Instagram don't add up to an artistic medium, they can serve as something like a sketchpad or daybook.
In order to qualify, the person has to be "dedicated to President Trump and his agenda," according to the job listing posted this week on Daybook.
Two books I consistently return to for pure encouragement are "Turn" and "Daybook," by the artist Anne Truitt, who was also a writer who wrote beautifully about the creative life.
With more than 6,700 properties worldwide, if the hack was about intelligence, it could have provided something like a daybook for the meetings and movements of high profile people all over the world.
Presumably they're "daybooks" because Hill worked on them daily, but The Book of Baruch is more diaristic than any of them: "This, it is becoming clear, is more a daybook than ever The Daybooks were," he notes.
Whitman kept a daybook listing the working-class men he made sexual advances toward, a record of the cruising spots and practices of 1860s Brooklyn: Gus White (19103) at Ferry with Skeleton boat with Walt Baulsir—(5 ft 9 round—well built) Timothy Meighan (30) Irish, oranges, Fulton & Concord James Dalton (Engine-Williamsburgh) These cruising spots were informal, collective institutions.
Share the house with 3 roommates.) Car Insurance: $124 Gas, Electric, Water: $75-$93 Internet + Cable: $17CBS All Access: $6 NakedWines: $40 Canva: $30 (For some freelance social media work I do)Health Insurance/Vision/Dental: Parents payCell Phone: Parents pay Amazon Prime, Netflix, Hulu, Spotify, Sling: $7 (I use various other people's accounts)Ally: $45Betterment: $9 (Currently have ~$30,11 across Ally, Betterment, and a few single stocks) Yearly Expenses: Multiple Political Professional Association Memberships: $123CA State Society Membership: $1Sorority Alumnae Chapter Membership: $3District Daybook and Tom Manatos Yearly Subscription: $45 Costco Membership: $2112Renter's Insurance: $213Washingtonian Magazine: $2115Zone 214 Parking Permit: $2130 (Parking at work is free and I do have parking at the back of my house, but I still appreciate the flexibility of the street parking permit.) Day One 217:2117 a.m.
A purchase returns journal (also known as returns outwards journal/purchase debits daybook) is a prime entry book or a daybook which is used to record purchase returns. In other words, it is the journal which is used to record the goods which are returned to the suppliers. The source document which is used as an evidence in recording transactions into purchase returns journal is the Debit note.
Daily records were then transferred to a daybook or account ledger to balance the accounts and to create a permanent journal; then the waste book could be discarded, hence the name.
Sketch from Kurt Tucholsky's Waste book A waste book was one of the books traditionally used in bookkeeping. It comprised a daily diary of all transactions in chronological order. It differs from a daybook in that only a single waste book is kept, rather than a separate daybook for each of several categories. The waste book was intended for temporary use only; the information needed to be transcribed into a journal in order to begin to balance one's accounts.
She is one of the contributing authors of the documenta 14 Daybook and speaker at 7th World Summit on Arts and Culture in Malta, Culture Summit Abu Dhabi 2018 and TEDx Ulaanbaatar 2018.
In business practice, cash account refers to a business-to-business or business-to-consumer account which is conducted on an immediate payment basis i.e. no credit is offered.Invest Northern Ireland, Invoicing and payment terms, accessed 29 May 2018 In accounting practice, "cash account" or "cash book" refers to a daybook (Main entry book) used to record all transactions related to cash, especially cash receipts and payments. Cash account is considered as a special daybook because of its dual impact in Accounting.
His efforts in establishing his claim were mostly unsuccessful. Despite his advertisement for dissolving his practice in April 1845, Wells sporadically continued his practice, with his last daybook entry being on November 5, 1845.
In 2014, The Naval Historical Foundation awarded him the Commodore Dudley W. Knox Naval History Lifetime Achievement Award.David F. Winkler, "Naval Historians to Receive Knox Award," Pull Together (Volume 53 No. 3 - Summer 2014) / Daybook (Volume 17 Issue 3), p. 12. In March 2016, the University of Oxford awarded Hattendorf a higher doctorate, the Doctor of Letters (D.Litt.) degree.
The information from the daybooks will be used in the nominal ledger and it is the nominal ledgers that will ensure the integrity of the resulting financial information created from the daybooks (provided that the information recorded in the daybooks is correct). The reason for this is to limit the number of entries in the nominal ledger: entries in the daybooks can be totalled before they are entered in the nominal ledger. If there are only a relatively small number of transactions it may be simpler instead to treat the daybooks as an integral part of the nominal ledger and thus of the double-entry system. However, as can be seen from the examples of daybooks shown below, it is still necessary to check, within each daybook, that the postings from the daybook balance.
Other team boats followed in succession, namely the Phoenix, Constitution, Moses Lancaster, and Independence. The Cooper's Ferry Daybook, 1819-1824, documenting Camden's Point Pleasant Teamboat, survives to this day. Horse powered ferries have also been documented in Wisconsin and New Hampshire. A shipwreck discovered in 1983 in Lake Champlain, the Burlington Bay Horse Ferry, is an example of a turntable team-boat.
Helen Mary Knowlton was born on August 16, 1832 in Littleton, Massachusetts,Thomas William Herringshaw. Herringshaw's National Library of American Biography: Contains Thirty-five Thousand Biographies of the Acknowledged Leaders of Life and Thought of the United States; Illustrated with Three Thousand Vignette Portraits .... American Publishers' Association; 1914. p. 443. the second of nine childrenLois Stiles Edgerly. Give Her This Day: A Daybook of Women's Words.
Ferry systems allowed Camden to generate business and economic growth. "These businesses included lumber dealers, manufacturers of wooden shingles, pork sausage manufacturers, candle factories, coachmaker shops that manufactured carriages and wagons, tanneries, blacksmiths and harness makers." The Cooper's Ferry Daybook, 1819–1824, documenting Camden's Point Pleasant Teamboat, survives to this day. Originally a suburban town with ferry service to Philadelphia, Camden evolved into its own city.
Journals are recorded in the general journal daybook. A journal is a formal and chronological record of financial transactions before their values are accounted for in the general ledger as debits and credits. A company can maintain one journal for all transactions, or keep several journals based on similar activity (e.g., sales, cash receipts, revenue, etc.), making transactions easier to summarize and reference later.
"Gay games organizers land major sponsor: Financial backing removes hurdle," Montreal Gazette, 30 January 2004, p. 8; Canada NewsWire Daybook for Friday, September 3, 2004; Mike King, "Gay competitors prefer Outgames," Montreal Gazette, 12 October 2004, p. 7; Ann Carroll, "Flowers might help," Montreal Gazette, 21 January 2005, p. 5; James Mennie, "Others already looking at how we've done these games," Montreal Gazette, 22 July 2005, p. 6.
Leopold Geitler (1847–1885) and Slovenian scholar Rajko Nahtigal (1877–1958) subsequently studied the alphabet, concluding that it was derived primarily from the Roman cursive. The earliest existing text in Todhri's script is Radhua Hesapesh (daybook) of a local merchant partnership known as Jakov Popa i Vogël dhe Shokët (Jakov Popa Junior and Friends). The entries in Todhri's script start on 10 August 1795 and continue until 1797.
He also authored Before I Forget, an autobiography of sorts revealing much of his upbringing in Oklahoma. The book gives a good insight to life for a young man during the early days of the 20th century. Other works include Theodore Dreiser(1925), A Bookman's Daybook (1929), The Smart Set Anthology, edited together with Groff Conklin (1934), The Joys of Reading: Life's Greatest Pleasure (1937) and Belle Starr, The Bandit Queen (1941).(8 June 1941).
The Notorious Career Of Belle Starr, The New York Times He was also a literary critic (New York World Telegram) and was a syndicated columnist throughout his career. He was best known for "A Bookman's Daybook," "The Book of the Week," and "TV First-Nighter." Rascoe married Hazel Luke on July 5, 1913, and they had two children, Alfred Burton Rascoe, Jr., born July 2, 1914, who died by suicide in 1936,(20 September 1936).
Tait recorded in his daybook that the house required of lumber, the roof was covered with 6,000 wooden shingles, and the chimneys and foundation required 12,000 bricks, made from clay on the plantation. Dry Fork is one of the oldest houses still standing in Wilcox County and remains in the Tait family. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on February 26, 1999 with the name of Dry Forks Plantation.
While Dr Penfold worked long hours setting up his practice, Mary supervised the running of the house, garden, the farm, the vineyard and winery. The first wines were prescribed as tonic wines for patients, particularly those suffering from anaemia. Penfold kept many records, including a diary and a daybook, that outlined her work managing the farm and developing the Magill Estate; however, historically, the development of the winery has been attributed solely to her husband.Alston, Margaret.
Oversight of petty cash is important because of the potential for abuse. Examples of petty cash controls include a limit (such as 10% of the total fund) on disbursements and monthly audits by someone other than the custodian. Use of petty cash is sufficiently widespread that vouchers for use in reimbursement are available at any office supply store. The petty cash daybook is one of the daybooks used in bookkeeping and the double-entry bookkeeping system.
In 1777, it was further noted that the schoolchildren had to bring the school firewood along with them to school. A school's daybook has survived from Berzweiler, in which the reader can see that from the beginning of Bavarian times, a schoolteacher named Carl Dörr worked in Berzweiler, and was succeeded by his son Johann Jacob. Johann Jakob Dörr was much given to hunting and it was thus deemed fit to transfer him to Nothweiler as punishment for this unfortunate vice.
Truitt's drawings are not often remembered when considering her body of work. For much of the 1950s, Truitt worked in pencil, acrylic, and ink to create not only studies for later sculptures, but drawings that existed independently as works of art. Truitt is also known for three books she wrote, Daybook, Turn, and Prospect, all journals. In Prospect, her third volume of reflections, Truitt set out to reconsider her "whole experience as an artist"—and also as a daughter, mother, grandmother, teacher and lifelong seeker.
John Wrottesley, The Great Northern Railway: volume II: Expansion and Competition, B T Batsford Limited, London, 1979, , pages 49 and 50 Carrying the GNR into Derbyshire had required a route making a circuit round the north of Nottingham from Colwick, but this meant that GNR passenger trains from Nottingham itself had to travel east, and then north and west. Reaching Daybook, they had travelled miles but were only miles from their starting point. Moreover the heavy mineral traffic on the line led to considerable congestion delay.
The Condé Museum in the château has one of the oldest collections of historic art in France and its collection of paintings is only surpassed in France by the Musée du Louvre. The museum also contains a collection of 1,300 manuscripts including the daybook Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry. As a condition of its bequest to the Institut de France by the Duke of Aumale, the collection's presentation cannot be modified nor can it be loaned out, so it is a permanent fixture of Chantilly.
General journal is a daybook or journal which is used to record transactions relating to adjustment entries, opening stock, accounting errors etc. The source documents of this prime entry book are journal voucher, copy of management reports and invoices. It is where double entry bookkeeping entries are recorded by debiting one or more accounts and crediting another one or more accounts with the same total amount. The total amount debited and the total amount credited should always be equal, thereby ensuring the accounting equation is maintained.
After his father's death in 1831, the business passed to William. Keeping with the family-run tradition, William brought several of his brothers and also his brother-in-law, John Leadbeater, into the business between 1832 and his death in 1852. John Leadbeater, a trained apothecary and dentist, purchased the business from William's wife, as the couple had no children, and changed the name of the business from William Stabler and Co. to John Leadbeater. Once the Civil War erupted, Alexandria was quickly occupied by Union troops – a fact noted in the Leadbeater business' daybook.
He chaired Duke's Department of Religion from 1972 to 1978. After his retirement from the Duke faculty in 1987, Poteat continued to supervise a few Ph.D. students and authored two books: A Philosophical Daybook: Post-Critical Investigations (1990) and Recovering the Ground: Critical Exercises in Recollection (1994). In 1993, two former students, James M. Nickell and James W. Stines, edited and provided an introduction to a collection of twenty-three of Poteat's essays, most published between 1953 and 1981, entitled The Primacy of Persons and the Language of Culture.
He built a château at AsnièresThe shuttered building today, overtaken by the spread of Paris . in 1750, with expenses that scandalized his virtuous uncle, to set the tone for the Court and display his collection of works by Northern Renaissance masters. In the decade 1748–58 he appears repeatedly in the daybook of the marchand-mercier Lazare Duvaux, often purchasing Chinese celadon porcelains set in rococo French gilt-bronze mounts, and even bringing to Duvaux fine examples from his own collection to be mounted according to his taste.Courajod 1873.
He is nearly deaf, and cries after Oskar turns on his hearing aids after a "long time" where he was unable to hear. Oskar's grandfather, Thomas Schell Sr. (also referred to as "the renter") is an important character in the story, even though he does not physically meet Oskar until the book's end. After the death of his first love, Anna, Oskar's grandfather loses his voice completely and consequently tattoos the words "yes" and "no" on his hands. He carries around a "daybook" where he writes phrases he cannot speak aloud.
Siegfried's first book is titled LifeLines (2000) with introductory remarks by Andrea Barrett. Some of the magazines where her photographs have been published are: the Schwarzweiss, La Fotografia Actual, The Women's Daybook, ARTNews, Shutterbug and Camera Arts. Her photo collections are found at the Aaron Copland House in Cortlandt Manor, New York, the Kiyosato Museum of Photographic Arts, Japan, the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography, Ottawa, and the Peter E. Palmquist Women in Photography International Archive in the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library at the Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
There are several standard methods of bookkeeping, including the single-entry and double-entry bookkeeping systems. While these may be viewed as "real" bookkeeping, any process for recording financial transactions is a bookkeeping process. Bookkeeping is the work of a bookkeeper (or book-keeper), who records the day-to-day financial transactions of a business. They usually write the daybooks (which contain records of sales, purchases, receipts, and payments), and document each financial transaction, whether cash or credit, into the correct daybook—that is, petty cash book, suppliers ledger, customer ledger, etc.
A phlog, also called an rlog, is a type of daybook, similar to a blog, that runs off a Gopher protocol server. These phlogs are typically hosted from home servers running some sort of UNIX operating system, because a user account on the server is usually required to update the content. There are quite a few phlogs floating around gopherspace but the vast majority are not updated regularly. Phlogs usually arranged as a directory structure with the title or date of each entry, has a separate folder for archives.
Pfeiffenberger began in a partnership with Henry Armstrong (Armstrong and Pfeiffenberger), 1858-1870. Then he was a partner in the firm of Pfeiffenberger and Hugo from 1870 on. Thereafter he formed a firm with two of his sons called, L. Pfeiffenberger and Sons. The Missouri History Museum holds a collection which includes six volumes of records of Armstrong and Pfeiffenberger, architects and contractors, 1858-1870, A daybook of Pfeiffenberger and Hugo, architects and contractors, 1970-1872, an index to architectural drawings, circa 1902-1923, and a letterbook, 1900-1907, of L. Pfeiffenberger and Sons, circa 1902-1923.
A purchase journal is a specialised accounting journal and it is also a prime entry book/daybook/main entry book which is used in an accounting system to keep track of the orders of items placed using accounts payable. Simply a purchase journal can be defined as the main entry book which is used to record credit transactions (credit purchases) for resalable purposes. The Source document which is used as an evidence in recording transactions into purchase journal is Purchase invoice. Credit purchase of current assets/Non current assets are not considered when recording in Purchase journal.
Sarah Ban Breathnach (pronounced “Bon Brannock”), is a best-selling author, philanthropist and public speaker. She is the author of thirteen books, including Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy which spent more than two years on The New York Times Best Seller list where it held the number one position for a year. To date, Simple Abundance has sold over 5 million copies and has been translated into 28 languages. Ban Breathnach's follow up book Simple Abundance, Something More, debuted at the number one spot on the best selling book lists of the New York Times, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal and Publisher's Weekly.
The City News Service closed at the end of 2005, and was swallowed into a smaller Tribune Internet news operation. City News lives on, in spirit, at least, at the Sun-Times. In February 2006, the Sun-Times worked to fill the void felt at the city's TV and radio stations by the demise of the old City News by starting its own 24-hour newswire, the STNG Wire. The key to the operation, staffed by veterans of both the original and the Tribune-run City News, is the Daybook, the invaluable daily listing of press conferences, court activity and other events throughout the Chicago metropolitan area, which is shared with subscribers and the Sun Times News Group family.
Lazare Duvaux (c1703 — 24 November 1758) was a Parisian marchand-mercier, among the most prominent designers and purveyors of furnishings, gilt-bronze- mounted European and Chinese porcelains, Vincennes porcelain and later Sèvres porcelain and all the small, refined luxuries that appealed to Mme de Pompadour, one of his most prominent clients, who entrusted the furnishing of her many châteaux to Duvaux. Lazare Duvaux was retrieved from posthumous obscurity when his daybook covering the decade 1748-1758 was published in 1873;Louis Courajod , Le livre-journal de Lazare Duvaux, Paris, 1873; Courajod's biography of Duvaux begins at p. lxviii of the introduction. it remains a central document of the decorative arts of the mid-18th century.
Yet he is also a burly, bounding, bustling, self-confident, opinionated, and highly-sweatered young man with faults so grievous that a melancholy perusal of them may be of more value to apprentices than a study of his serious virtues. If he could ever be persuaded that he isn't half as good as he thinks he is, if he would learn the art of sitting still and using a blue pencil, he might become twice as good as he thinks he is–which would about rank him with Homer." Derleth good-humoredly reprinted the criticism along with a photograph of himself sans sweater, on the back cover of his 1948 country journal: Village Daybook. A lighter side to the Sac Prairie Saga is a series of quasi-autobiographical short stories known as the "Gus Elker Stories", amusing tales of country life that Peter Ruber, Derleth's last editor, said were "...models of construction and...fused with some of the most memorable characters in American literature.
Among its manuscript holdings are a ledger-daybook kept by Josiah Winslow in the Plymouth Colony from 1696 to 1759, and the account book of the English sculptor John Flaxman from 1809 to 1826. In 1928 book collector, mathematician and Teacher’s College Professor David Eugene Smith, along with his friend, publisher George Arthur Plimpton, founded the Friends of the Libraries, the second such organization in the United States (the first was founded at Harvard in 1925) and one that would help to drive the growth of Columbia’s special collections for decades to come. The first major effort of the University to acquire a collection of rare research material by purchase occurred a year later, when the university bought the internationally known library on the history of economics assembled by Professor Edwin R. A. Seligman. The purchase of the Seligman library marked the beginning of the spectacular growth of the library during the 1930s.
He apprenticed circa 1729 with Rufus Greene in his shop on Newberry Street, and then circa 1737–1739 worked from him as a journeyman. Greene's records indicate that he paid Homes 82 pounds 16 shillings 9 pence for work done in the year 1738. In January 1739 "William Homes of Boston Goldsmith" ordered "sundries P. daybook" from silversmith Benjamin Greene, Rufus Greene's brother, for which he paid just over 4 pounds on May 9, 1740. Homes worked as a gold- and silversmith from 1739 to 1763 at his shop in Ann Street and later properties, and was known as the "honest goldsmith." He married Rebecca Dawes (aunt of patriot Thomas Dawes), on April 24, 1740, with whom he had 15 children, many of whom died in infancy. In 1763 he turned over his shop to his son, devoting himself to selling general merchandise and buying and selling real estate. Homes joined the Artillery Company in 1747, and was promoted over time from First Sergeant in 1752 through Captain in 1765, and an active Son of Liberty. He also served as clerk of the market in 1753, warden in 1764, fireward from 1764 to 1770, and purchaser of grain from 1766 to 1769, surveyor of the highways from 1767 to 1769.

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