[
UK
/dˈeɪbʊk/
]
NOUN
- a ledger in which transactions have been recorded as they occurred
-
an accounting journal as a physical object
he bought a new daybook
How To Use daybook In A Sentence
- In a daybook or journal, begin to keep a record of interesting character names and place names related to your community.
- If this reader wants to be like Ink, she can begin by writing some short opinion pieces in a daybook.
- During the 19th century account numbers began to replace slashes to indicate posting of daybook entries.
- The daybook kept by Joshua Shipman, a cabinetmaker, records a brisk business between 1796 and 1803.
- The oldest daybook I have dates back to 1963 when I used it to keep track of the money I made caddying at a local golf club.
- The history of upper-class folk in the Old South is documented through journals, diaries, daybooks, and material possessions.
- Robert has checked his daybook - his survey was at end Sept. 93.
- The daybook entries of Potter and Allen in Oakham, Massachusetts, for example, include entries for moccasins, mats, and baskets in the 1830s.
- It's all routine, all noted in my daybook, and much if not all of it has happened before.
- his cogitations were dutifully recorded in his daybook