Educated young men did write journals back then (as did some educated young women), so the first step would be to create the character. Give him a name that young men had back then, and decide how old he is. What country was he living in? What was his religion? Who was the leader of his country? If he is the son of a nobleman, what is his father's name and does he have other family members? Obviously, a nobleman's family would spend time doing different activities than, let's say, a poor person or a slave, so how does he spend his time? Is he in school, for example?
Give your journal entry some local touches: any good history book will discuss how the different social classes lived in the 1600s. You might also want to invent a conversation your nobleman's son had with somebody famous: the nobles often knew the important members of the clergy, the important people in business, and maybe even a member of the royal family, if the story is taking place in a country which had a monarchy.
In short, find some little historical touches that will demonstrate your knowledge of life back then. But above all, make sure you create some reason for the journal entry: an issue or problem or important event that might have made this young man write in his journal. With a little creativity, you can make your readers feel like they are there, back in the 1600s, listening to this young man as he tells them his story.
It is impossible to remember the reason for every entry & the entries in the journal sometimes involve "out of the ordinary" transactions.
Compound journal entry is that entry which records more than one business transaction in one single journal entry.
There is no journal entry for forecasting sales rather journal entry is made for actual sales when they occur.
Recording of a transaction in an accounting journal, such as the General Journal. The journal entry has equal debit and credit amounts, and it usually includes a one-sentence explanation of the purpose of the transaction is called journal entry.
Journal entry is the basic transaction to record the business transaction and without journal entry no record can be maintained.
Journal entry is required to record business transaction in books of accounts and without journal entry no business transaction can be recorded in books.
There is no journal entry for bill received rather journal entry is made when bill is actually paid or when utility is actually utilized.
When recording a debit entry into a journal you must always list the debit first. The credit needs to be second and should always be indented.
journal entry to write off a loan
recording of business transaction in chronological order is a journal entry
1 - General journal entry2 - Adjusting journal entry3 - Month end adjusting entry
For the recording of journal entry, it is mandatory to be business transaction occurred already otherwise no journal entry can be made prior to occurrence of business transaction.