Answer to Question 1
The accounting equation: Assets = Liabilities + Owners' Equity
Assets are things of value that a firm owns, such as its cash, inventory of goods available for sale, land, machinery, equipment, and buildings.
Liabilities indicate what the firm owes to non-owners or, put another way, they represent the claims non-owners have against the firm's assets. The amount the firm owes to a bank when it takes out a loan is an example of a liability. Accounts payable, what the firm owes suppliers when it buys supplies on credit, is another example of a liability.
Owners' equity refers to the claims the owners have against their firm's assets. In a corporation, one of the key owners' equity accounts is common stock, which represents the shares of ownership investors have in a business. Retained earnings, which are the earnings that have been reinvested in the company (rather than distributed to owners), are also included in owners' equity.
Answer to Question 2
C