I'm assuming you are talking about Absorption costing which is essentially the opposite of Variable Costing.
Absorption Costing: Where all costs (Direct and Indirect) related to producing (Not Selling & Admin) a product are distributed evenly into the cost of the goods.
Lets say we only used $5 worth of materials and $2.50 worth of labour to make a doll. There is also $1000 worth of fixed expenses related to making the doll.
Under Variable Costing: the cost of making a doll is only the variable costs. Hence, the cost of 1 doll is 5+2.50 = $7.50/doll
Under Absorption costing: Lets say we made 100 dolls ($10/doll worth of Fixed costs). The total cost of a doll would therefore but 5 + 2.50 + 10 = $17.50/doll
I guess you could say that it absorbs the ALL the costs of manufacturing.
method of overhead absorption
As far as I know there is only an overhead absorption rate and a full absorption rate. The alternative being marginal costing. There are 3 methods of absorption costing. These being Activity, Time and Efficiency but I'm not sure what you are asking exactly.
In absorption costing, overhead absorption rate or blanket rate is key to spread all overheads on production of volume of product, because if we don't have the overhead absorption rate manufacturing overhead cannot be spread or there is no basis for allocation of overheads on manufactured units.
An activity-based absorption costing system defines the cost by how many activities a product unit uses. A traditional absorption costing system defines the cost by how much money went into making the product unit.
Absorption method is that in which predetermined overhead rate is use to allocate all overheads to departments or activities.
The heat Sand absorbs from the Sun's rays is an example of energy absorption
The heat Sand absorbs from the Sun's rays is an example of energy absorption
melting or absorption of heat
An absorption of bone so that the tissue becomes unusually porous.
The correct answer is salts
An example of light absorption is a crystal. Crystals absorb light and then reflect the light back out resulting in the appearance of a rainbow.
One example of sound wave absorption in a practical setting is the use of acoustic panels in recording studios to reduce echoes and improve sound quality.
For example UV-VIS absorption spectrophotometry.
An example of intranasal administration is using a nasal spray to deliver medication directly into the nasal cavity for quick absorption into the bloodstream.
Absorption of water by plants is a form of diffusion called osmosis.
An example of transmission of sound would be a person talking through a phone, where the sound waves travel through the phone's material. An example of absorption would be sound being absorbed by a carpeted room, reducing echoes. An example of reflection would be sound bouncing off a hard wall, creating reverberation.
what is meaning of bread