Both accounts are. Accounts is a plural noun, so you use the plural form of the verb. Apples are delicious; my apple is delicious.
Depositor's account need to be increased by 468 to actually show the correct balance in books of accounts and that is the difference in both amounts.
To be able to verify everything is correct after the accounts are combined
If you are talking about a particular person who has that exact title, then it is correct to capitalize Accounts Payable Administrator.
Balancing an account is when you add up assets, liabilities, and owner equity and put them into the equation... Assets = Liabilities + Owner Equity (often called Stockholder's Equity). The reason for doing this is to spot and correct errors. If this equation has equal numbers on both sides, the account is balanced and the accounts are most likely correct (you can still have a mistake with balanced accounts). If it is not equal on both sides, there has has been a mistake and the transactions need to be looked at more thoroughly.
It is a branch which had able to prepare its own accounts on its books then we say that is an independent branch. Accounts prepared by it is technically called as independent branch accounts.
sad to say or sadly to say which is correct or can both be used?
The correct phrase is "both genders."
Yes, you can say "congratulations to you", but most people usually just say "congratulations!" as an exclamation! :)
It is correct to say them both, but it matters on what you want to say.
No, "she and you" is not correct. The correct way to phrase it would be "she and you."
Shoo-in is the correct spelling; but when you say either, both sound the same.
Both are probably correct, but I say unmark
the correct way to say it is both of them cause they both make sense...
It's correct to say "you both look well," but most people would say "You both look nice."
"Both them and us were excited" is not correct usage. Look at how the pronouns would be used separately, then combine them in one, correct sentence. You would say "They were excited" not "Them were excited." Similarly, you would say "We were excited," not "Us were excited." The correct combination would be: "We and they were excited."
"Congrats" is an abbreviation, not suitable for formal writing or polite discourse. You may say Congratulations to both of you, or -to you both.
You can say "yo acepto" or just"acepto". Both are correct.