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Holy Thursday is the Thursday before good Friday, that is the day Jesus was arrested and brought to trial and found guilty, the following day (Good Friday) he was crucified.
No, it is not a complete proof of arithmetical accuracy of account. A Trial Balance in which the credit and debit accounts match does not prove that, all transactions have been recorded in the proper accounts. For example, the wages paid for the installation of machinery had been erroneously recorded by debiting the wages account in the place of machinery account, the Trial Balance would still agree. Similarly, an agreed Trial Balance does not prove that all transactions have been recorded in the books of original entry. For example, a credit sale invoice were to be completely omitted from being recorded in the sales day book, the error would not be disclosed in the Trial Balance. To conclude, we can say that a trial balance should not be recorded as a conclusive proof of the correctness of the books of account.
Tuesday
day 1 $0.01 day 2 $0.02 day 3 $0.04 day 4 $0.08 day 5 $0.16 day 6 $0.32 day 7 $0.64 day 8 $1.28 day 9 $2.56 day 10 $5.12 day 11 $10.24 day 12 $20.48 day 13 $40.96 day 14 $81.92 day 15 $163.84 day 16 $327.68 day 17 $655.36 day 18 $1310.72 day 19 $2621.44 day 20 $5242.88 day 21 $10485.76 day 22 $20971.52 day 23 $41943.04 day 24 $83886.08 day 25 $167772.16 day 26 $335544.32 day 27 $671088.64 day 28 $1342177.28 day 29 $2684354.56 day 30 $5368709.12 ---------------------------- which you can set up an equation to find the amount on any particular day: 2(n-1)*$0.01, where n is the day. So the sixth day would be 2(6-1)*$0.01 = 25*$0.01 = 32*$0.01 = $0.32 which is answer listed above for day 6.