If you want to be mechanically technical, yes; but the form is atrocious.
It would be better worded, "Please credit my salary to the following account:"
The operating costs, as he probably told you, are too hign. With the commas that I added , the sentence is not only grammatically correct, but makes perfect sense, at least to me.
ok now lets see mr smith was our debtor and he paid us cash of 100 $ and now as you know debtors are an asset so when they owe you money they are debited but when they pay up you credited them ... you debited mr smiths account and credited your sales now to correct this entry you will have to double up the amont from 100 $ to 200$ and you will now correct it by crediting mr smiths account by 200 and debiting your sales by 200 so know you will have a balance of 100 as now the entries have been balanced .
No. This is not correct English. It is better to say:Please find attached your letter of credit.
Provision of depreciation account is the account of provision of depreciation.First of all we should understand provision of depreciation .Provision of depreciation is the collected value of all depreciation. With making of this account we are not credited depreciation in asset account. But transfer every year depreciation to provision of depreciation account. Every year we adopt this procedure and when assets are sold we will transfer sold assets 'total depreciation to credit side of asset account. For calculating correct profit or loss on fixed asset. This provision uses with any method of calculating depreciation.
Management account, cardholder account, transaction list
You had not taken that into account. Would be the grammatically correct version of that sentence.
This sentence is grammatically correct.
Yes, it is.
Der Junge ist rothaarig is grammatically correct.
no
yes
Yes. "I do not like people" is complete and correct, albeit anti-social.
Please address all your queries to the following office.
Your account has not been generating much traffic.This sentence is grammatically correct. It is negative present perfect continuous.
No, "firsts" is not grammatically correct. It should be "first."
"Not like that" can be grammatically correct, depending on the context.
The phrase "Is you don't miss me do you" is not grammatically correct. It should be rephrased to something like "Don't you miss me?" to be correct.