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AP Human Geography Chapter 6: Language Flashcards

Chapter 6 about language in the AP Human Geography book.

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995628816LanguageSet of sounds, combination of sounds, and symbols used for communication.
995628817CultureRalph Linton - Total knowledge, attitudes, and habitual behavior patterns shared by society members.
995628818Standard LanguageA language variant used for the norm of media, school, government, and public life by the country's political and intelligent elite.
995628819DialectVariant of a language (Pronounciation, grammer, and vocabulary).
995628820IsoglossGeogrpahic boundary where linguist reatures occur.
995628821Mutual IntelligibilityTwo people understand each other when speaking.
995628822Dialect ChainsSet of contigious dielcts where the one near each other at any place in the chain arw most closely related.
995628823Language FamilyGrouos of languages with shard, but slightly distant origin.
995628824SubfamiliesDivisions within a family; commolities more definite.
995628825Sound ShiftSlight word change in language within the subfamilies and language family from present time, backward to its origin.
995628826Proto Indo-EuropeanAncestral Indo-european
995628827Backward ReconstructionTracking Sound shifts and hardening of consonants "backwards" to the original language.
995628828Extinct languagelanguage without any native speakers.
995628829Deep reconstructionRecreate language that preceded it.
995628830NostraticProto Indo-European ancient ancenstor
995628831Language Divergence1 language formed into 2.
995628832Language Convergence2 languages collapsing into 1.
995628833Renfrew's Hypothesis-That said Proto Indo-European came from the Fertile Cresent. Anatolia into Europe, West Arc to North Africa and Arab, and East Arc into Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India.
995628834Conquest TheoryTHEORY said that early Pro-Indo-Eurpean speakers spread West by horseback, overpowering, beginning diffusion snd differentiation of the Indo-European tongues.
995628835Dispersal TheoryTHEORY said Indo-Eupopean first moved East to SouthWest asia -> Caspian Sea -> Russian-Ukraine Plains -> Balkans. Another part said it moved west.
995628836Romance LanguagesFrench, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, and Portugese
995628837Germanic LanguagesEnglish, German, Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish
995628838Slavanic LanguagesRussian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Ukrainian, Slovenian, Serbo-Croatian, and Bulgarian.
995628839Lingua FrancaAncient language in the Mediterranean ports usually for trading and commerce
995628840Pidgin LanguageWhere 2 or more languages come. Part of each of them combine into a simplified structure and vocabulary.
995628841Creole LanguageBegan as a Pidgin language, but later adopted as mother tongue by the people of the mother tongue land.
995628842Monolingual StatesCountries with one language spoken.
995628843Multilingual StatesCountries with more than one language spoken.
995628844Official LanguageMultilingual countries have language chosen by an educated, powerful elite, usually the language is spoken in Courts and in the government.
995628845Global LanguageLanguage most commonly used around the world. Basis of many speakers or trade prevelance.
995628846PlaceUniqueness of a location.
995628847ToponymPLACE name

So you're procrastinator... The good news, so are millions of high school and college students across the country. By all accounts, you're not unique in your inability to get ahead on assignments and more often than not, you'll be "forced" to stay up late either cramming for an exam or attempting to complete a six page paper you were assigned more than a month ago.

Quizlet-Chap 14-Supervising Police Personnel-7th Ed. Flashcards

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368376363____ gives us a destination, while POP provides answers on how to get there.COP
368376364In the early 1970's, the ___________ Police Department, Massachusetts, instituted a program considered by many to be the showcase of federally funded team policing programs.Holyoke
369924498The central mission of the police is to ______ ________.control crime
368376366Crime fighting today mainly relies on 4 tactics: _________ patrol, rapid response to calls for service, _________-____ investigation of crimes, and ____________ measurements.motorized, follow up, performance
368376367The police focus on serious ___________ has also been sharpened by screening calls for service, targeting patrol, and developing forensic technology.crime
368386636Improved _______ ________ can be achieved by diagnosing and managing problems in the community that produce crimes, fostering closer relations with the community to facilitate crime solving, building self-defense capabilities within the community itself, and implementing real time anticipatory COMPSTAT technology.crime control
369924499Community-oriented policing is primarily a matter of philosophy, ___________ _________, and structure.administrative style
369924500COP requires a greater degree of ____________ than does the current policing strategy.decentralization
369924501Awareness, Understanding, Utilization, Normalization, and Excellence are all stages of Community-Policing ______________.implementation
369924502COP hinges not on a need for more money but rather on a need for ____________ change, with organizational ______________ support, and the understanding and belief that fighting crime is everyone's business, and that the cops really cannot do it alone.administrative, community
369924503The COP strategy is for the __________ to promote and buttress the community's ability to create safe neighborhoods.police
369924504In terms of time, COP requires __-__ years before significant results can be measured.3-5
369924505Community benefits of COP are: a commitment to crime _____________, public scrutiny of police operations, ____________ to the public, customized police service, ___________ organization.prevention, accountability, community
369924506Police benefits of COP are: greater ________ support, shared responsibility, greater ______ satisfaction, better internal relationships, support for ______________ change.citizen, job, organizational
369924507One should view COP as an overall departmental ___________ for improving police work.strategy
369924508______ should be treated as a tactical method for making COP work.POP
369924509___________-___________ policing emphasizes the value of being able to diagnose the continuing problems that lie behind the repeated incidents that are reported to police employees and to design and implement solution to those problems.Problem-Oriented
369924510Police agencies are typically labeled as either "________" or "__________" driven.incident, problem
369924511Most police agencies are _________ driven.incident
369924512The Incident driven police department has 4 characteristics: it is reactive, relies on limited _____________, invokes the criminal justice process to resolve incidents, and use aggregate __________ to measure performance.information, statistics
368376365A police agency can adopt more than one crime-control strategy, but they must be _________.compatible
369924513The practice of POP seeks to improve on other professional crime fighting models by adding _________ and thoughtfulness.proactivity
369924514POP assumes that police can _________ offenses and resolve them.anticipate
369924515The 8 reasons for _____ are: lack of success, efficiency has been __________, scarce resources, reaction, community _______________, brainpower, culture, expanded ___________.POP, inefficient, partnership, mission
369924516Eliminating it totally, decreasing it, designing it, and removing it are 4 ___________-____________ methods.problem-solving
369924517The 5 principles to serve as a guideline for the application of a successful POP program are: it must involve all ____________ members, it must foster the use of a wide variety of _____ sources, it must encourage police department members to work with other public and private agencies, it must be capable of becoming an integral part of police __________-____________ without creating special units, must be capable of being applied to other agencies.departmental, data, decision-making
369924518SARA stands for: Scanning, ___________, Response, and ________________.Analysis, Assessment
369924519The 3 Phases of POP are: __________ of problems, analysis of ____________, options.identification, problems
369924520The _______ employees are in the best position to identify problems.line
369924521POP emphasizes ___________ over efficiency.effectiveness
369924522POP comprises of 11 steps that commence with the __________ of incidents together.grouping
369924523There are at least ______ options for handling a problem.9
369924524Without ___________ and feedback, POP is likely to fail.evaluation

AP Bio Ch. 19 Eukaryotic Genomes Flashcards

Vocabulary and study material based on Ch. 19 (Eukaryotic Genome) of Campbell Reece AP Biology textbook.

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123187311Approximately how many genes are in the human genome?25,000
123187312ChromatinComplex DNA and proteins that make up a eukaryotic chromosome.
123187313HistonesProteins that pack chromatin and have a high concentration of positively-charged amino acids.
123187314NucleosomeA basic unit of DNA packaging in eukaryotes. DNA wound around a histone.
123187315HeterochromatinHighly compacted, clumpy chromatin.
123187316Euchromatinless compacted chromatin.
123187317Eukaryotic chromatin is mostly composed of...DNA and histones.
123187318Cell differentiationThe specialization of cells.
123187319A typical human cell expresses approximately how many of its genes at a given time?20%
123187320Differential gene expressionThe expression of different genes by cells within the same genome.
123187321Approximately what percentage of a typical eukaryotic genome codes for proteins?1.5%
123187322The expression of most genes is regulated at...Transcription
123187323Histone acetylationAddition of acetyl groups to histones, which spread the histones further apart and allow RNA polymerase to access the DNA for transcription. (One way to regulate gene expression)
123187324DNA methylationAddition of methyl groups to DNA, which turns off genes and represses transcription. (One way to regulate gene expression)
123187325Genomic imprintingMethylation permanently affects the genes. (One way to regulate gene expression)
123187326Epigenetic inheritanceInherited changes in the phenotype that are not related to changes in the DNA sequence.
123187327Control elementsSegments of noncoding DNA that regulate transcription by binding certain products. (One way to regulate gene expression)
123187328Transcription factorsProteins that aid RNA polymerase in initiating transcription.
123187329EnhancersControl elements that are located further away from the promoter and stimulate transcription of a gene.
123187330ActivatorProtein that works with an enhancer to stimulate transcription of a gene.
123187331In a eukaryotic cell, genes that code for similar functions are grouped...(together? apart?)Apart from one another. In prokaryotic cells, however, they are all located near one another on an operon.
123187332Alternative RNA splicingThe process in which different proteins are created from the same RNA, depending on what is viewed as an exon or as an intron.
123187333microRNAs (miRNAs)RNA that can bind to complementary sequences of mRNA and block its expression.
123187334RNA interference (RNAi)Using miRNA to turn off a sequence of mRNA.
123187335Small interfering RNA (siRNA)RNA that inhibits the expression of an RNA segment of the same sequence.
123187336OncogenesCancer-causing genes.
123187337Proto-oncogenesGenes that code for normal cell growth and division.
123187338How can a proto-oncogene turn into an oncogene?1. A point mutation 2. Amplification of the proto-oncogene 3. Movement of DNA within the genome (transposable elements)
123187339Tumor-suppressor genesProteins that prevent uncontrolled cellular growth. ***If a mutation strikes this, it can cause cancer (due to the absence of suppression).
123187340Ras proto-oncogeneType of proto-oncogene. If mutated, it is always turned on (not good!)
123187341p53 tumor-supressor geneType of tumor-suppressant gene.
123187342Cancer is generally the result of an accumulation of...Mutations, either to the proto-oncogene, the tumor-suppressant gene, or the telomerase gene.
123187343Can oncogenes and mutated tumor suppressant genes be inherited?Yes.
123187344Transposons"Jumping genes." Genes that can jump around in the genome (in either eukaryotic or prokaryotic cells).
123187345RetrotransposonsTransposons that move around via an RNA intermediate and reverse transcriptase, and that leave a copy of its original form.
123187346Multigene familiesCollections of identical or similar genes.
123187347PseudogenesNonfunctional DNA sequences that closely resemble gene families.

Campbell Biology: Ninth Edition - Chapter 9: Cellular Respiration and Fermentation Flashcards

Vocabulary: aerobic respiration, anaerobic respiration, fermentation, oxidation, reduction, reducing agent, oxidizing agent, redox reaction, electron transport chain, NAD (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide), glycolysis, Kreb cycle (citric acid cycle), oxidative phosphorylation, substrate-level phosphorylation, chemiosmosis, ATP synthase, cytochromes, proton-motive force, obligate aerobe, obligate anaerobe, facultative anaerobe, beta oxidation, biosynthesis
Objectives: After attending lectures and studying the chapter, the student should be able to:
1. Define cellular respiration.
a. State which organisms undergo cellular respiration.
b. Distinguish between the site of cellular respiration in prokaryotic cells and in eukaryotic cells.
c. Distinguish between the terms aerobic and anaerobic.
d. Write the general chemical equation for aerobic cellular respiration.
e. Write the general chemical equation for lactic acid fermentation and state which organisms can undergo this process.
f. Write the general chemical equation for alcohol fermentation and state which organisms can undergo this process.
2. Relating to cellular energy:
a. Explain the chemical energy relationship between glucose and ATP.
b. Explain the chemical energy role of ATP in driving cellular reactions.
c. Describe the structure of ATP, ADP, and AMP.
d.Explain why ATP is considered the "energy currency" of the cell and glucose is not.
e. State how many ATPs are produced from 1 glucose molecule during:
* aerobic cellular respiration in prokaryotic cells
* aerobic cellular respiration in eukaryotic cells
* fermentation
3. Describe the making of ATP through substrate-level phosphorylation.
4. Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis):
a. Define oxidation and reduction and describe the redox reactions of an electron transport chain.
b.

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978426324Explain concept 9.1: Catabolic pathways yield energy by oxidizing organic fuelsCatabolic pathways are a set of metabolic pathways that breaks down molecules into smaller units to release energy
978426325Compare and contrast aerobic and anaerobic respirationBoth processes include glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and oxidated phosphorylation. In aerobic respiration the final electron acceptor is molecular oxygen O2; in anaerobic respiration the final electron Accceptor is a different substance.
978426326Describe the difference between the two processes in cellular respiration that produce ATP: oxidative phosphorylation and substrate-level phosphorylationMost of the ATP produced in cellular respiration come from oxidative phosphorylation, in which the energy released from redox reactions in an electron transport chain is used to produce ATP. In substrate level phosphorylation, an enzyme dirctly transfers a phosphate group to ADP fro an intermediate substrate. All ATP production in glycolysis occurs by substrate-level phosphorylation, this form of ATP production also occurs at one step in the citric acid cycle.
978426327Explain concept 9.2: Glycolysis harvests chemical energy by oxidizing glucose to pyruvate...
978426328During the redox reaction in glycolysis, which molecule acts as the oxidizing agent? Which molecule acts as the reducing agent?NAD+ acts as the oxidizing agent in step 6, accepting electrons from glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, which thus acts as the reducing agent
978426329During the redox reaction in glycolysis, Which molecule acts as the reducing agent?glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, which acts as the reducing agent
978426330What is the source of energy for the formation of ATP and NADH in glycolysis?The oxidation of the three carbon sugar glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, yields energy. In this oxidation, electrons and H+ are transferred to NAD+, forming NADH, and a phosphate group is attached to the oxidized substrate. ATP is then formed b y substrate level phosphorylation when this phosphate group is transferred to ADP
978426331Explain concept 9.3: After pyruvate is oxidized, the citric acid cycle completes the energy yielding oxidation of organic molecules...
978426332Name the molecules that conserve most of the energy from the citric acid cycle's redox reactions. How is this energy converted to a form that can be used to make ATP?NADH and FADH2; they will donate electrons to the electron transport chain
978426333What processes in your cells produce the CO2 that you exhaleCO2 is released from the pyruvate that is the end product of glycoloysis, and CO2 is also released during the citric acid cycle
978426334What molecular products indicate the complete oxidation of glucose during cellular respiration?...
978426335Explain concept 9.4: During oxidative phosphorylation, chemiosmosis couples electron transport to ATP synthesis...
978426336What effect would an absence of O2 have on the process shown in figure 9.15?...
978426337Briefly explain the mechanism by which ATP synthase produces ATP. List three locations in which ATP synthases are found....
978426338Explain concept 9.5: Fermentation and anaerobic respiration enable cells to produce ATP without the use of oxygen...
978426339Consider the NADH formed during glycolysis. What is the final acceptor for its electrons during fermentation?...
978426340Consider the NADH formed during glycolysis. What is the final acceptor for its electrons during aerobic respiration?...
978426341Which process yields more ATP, fermentation, or anaerobic respiration?...
978426342Explain concept 9.6: Glycolysis and the citric acid cycle connect to many other metabolic pathways...
978426343Compare the structure of a fat with that of a carbohydrate, what features of their structure make fat a much better fuel?...
978426344Under what circumstances might your body synthesize fat molecules...
978426345Describe how catabolic pathways of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle intersect with anabolic pathways in the metabolism of a cell....
978426346As it pertains to cellular respiration, state which organisms undergo cellular respiration....
978426347As it pertains to cellular respiration, distinguish between the site of cellular respiration in prokaryotic cells and in eukaryotic cells.ATP synthases are found in the inner mitochondrial membranes of eukaryotic cells and in the plasma membranes of prokaryotes.
978426348As it pertains to cellular respiration, distinguish between the terms aerobic and anaerobic....
978426349As it pertains to cellular respiration, write the general chemical equation for aerobic cellular respiration....
978426350As it pertains to cellular respiration, write the general chemical equation for lactic acid fermentation and state which organisms can undergo this process....
978426351As it pertains to cellular respiration, write the general chemical equation for alcohol fermentation and state which organisms can undergo this process....
978426352Relating to cellular energy: explain the chemical energy relationship between glucose and ATP....
978426353Relating to cellular energy: explain the chemical energy role of ATP in driving cellular reactions....
978426354Relating to cellular energy: describe the structure of ATP, ADP, and AMP....
978426355Relating to cellular energy: explain why ATP is considered the "energy currency" of the cell and glucose is not....
978426356Relating to cellular energy: state how many ATPs are produced from 1 glucose molecule during aerobic cellular respiration in prokaryotic cells...
978426357Relating to cellular energy: state how many ATPs are produced from 1 glucose molecule during aerobic cellular respiration in eukaryotic cells...
978426358Relating to cellular energy: state how many ATPs are produced from 1 glucose molecule during fermentation...
978426359Describe the making of ATP through substrate-level phosphorylation....
978426360Describe how organic molecules other than glucose (specifically proteins, fats, and nucleic acids) can be a source of energy by being broken down and used during glycolysis, the transition reaction, or the Krebs cycle....
978426361Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis): define oxidation and reduction and describe the redox reactions of an electron transport chain....
978426362Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis): relate the redox reactions of an electron transport chain to the active transport of hydrogen ions (H+) across a membrane....
978426363Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis): relate the active transport of H+ ions across a membrane to the formation of an electrochemical gradient....
978426364Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis): relate the electrochemical gradient to the facilitated diffusion of H+ ions across a membrane....
978426365Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis): relate facilitated diffusion of H+ ions through the ATP synthase protein channel to the making of ATP....
978426366Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: describe the molecules ATP and NADH and distinguish between the different energy-storing roles of each....
978426367Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: describe the process of glycolysis, including the major molecules involved and the energy-storing molecules produced....
978426368Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: describe the process of the transition reaction, including the major molecules involved and the energy-storing molecules produced....
978426369Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: describe the process of the Krebs cycle, including the major molecules involved and the energy-storing molecules produced, and explain why the Krebs cycle is considered a cycle....
978426370Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: describe the roles of NADH, FADH2, and O2 in the electron transport chain part of oxidative phosphorylation...
978426371Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: show the relationship between the electron transport chain, active transport, and facilitated diffusion in the oxidative phosphorylation process of making ATP....
978426372Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: state the specific locations of glycolysis, the transition reaction, the Krebs cycle, and the oxidative-phosphorylation process in eukaryotic cells....
978426373Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: state the specific locations of glycolysis, the transition reaction, the Krebs cycle, and the oxidative-phosphorylation process in prokaryotic cells....
978426374Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: state the number of ATPs produced during glycolysis, the transition reaction, the Krebs cycle, and the oxidative-phosphorylation process....
978426375Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: explain why aerobic cellular respiration results in 36 ATPs per glucose in eukaryotic cells and 38 ATPs per glucose in prokaryotic cells....
978426376Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: relate glycolysis to lactic acid fermentation and alcohol fermentation....
978426377FermentationPartial degradation of sugars or other organic fuel that occurs without the use of oxygen
978426378Aerobic RespirationCatabolic pathway in which oxygen is consumed as a reactant along with the organic fuel
978426379Cellular RespirationIncludes both aerobic and anaerobic processes
978426380Redox ReactionsA chemical reaction involving the complete or partial transfer of one or more electrons from one reactant to another; short for reduction-oxidation reaction
978426381OxidationThe complete or partial loss of electrons from a substance involved in a redox reaction
978426382ReductionThe complete or partial addition of electrons to a substance involved in a redox reaction
978426383Reducing AgentThe electron donor in a redox reaction
978426384Oxidizing AgentThe electron receptor in a redox reaction
978426385NAD+Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, a coenzyme that cycles easily between oxidized (NAD+) and reduced (NADH) states, thus acting as an electron carrier.
978426386Electron Transport ChainA sequence of electron carrier molecules (membrane proteins) that shuttle electrons down a series of redox reactions that release energy used to make ATP
978426387GlycolysisA series of reactions that ultimately splits glucose into pyruvate. Occurs in almost all living cells, serving as the starting point for fermentation or cellular respiration
978426388The Citric Acid CycleA chemical cycle involving eight steps taht completes the metabolic breakdown of glucose molecules begun in glycolysis by oxidyzing acetyl CoA (derived from pyruvate) to carbon diozide; occcurs within the mitochondrion in eukaryotic cells and in the cytosol of prokaryotes; together with pyruvate oxidation, the second majoy stage in cellular respiration.
978426389Oxidative PhosphorylationThe production of ATP using energy derived from the redox reactions of an electron transport chain; the third major stage of cellular respiration
978426390Substrate-level phosphorylationThe enzyme catalyzed formation of ATP by direct transfer of a phosphate group to ADP from an intermediate substrate in catabolism
978426391Acetyl CoAAcetyl coenzyme A; the entry compound for the citric acid cycle in cellular respiration, formed from a fragment of pyruvate attached to a coenzyme.
978426392CytochromesAn iron-containing protein that is a component of electron transport chains in the mitochondria and chloroplasts of eukaryotic cells and the plasma membranes of prokaryotic cells
978426393ATP SynthaseA complex of several membrane proteins that functions in chemiosmosis with adjacent electron transport chains, using the energy of a hydrogen ion (proton) concentration gradient to make ATP. ATP synthases are found in the inner mitochondrial membranes of eukaryotic cells and in the plasma membranes of prokaryotes.
978426394ChemiosmosisAn energy coupling mechanism that uses energy stored in the form of a hydrogen ion gradient across a membrane to drive cellular work; such as the synthesis of ATP. Under aerobic conditions, most ATP synthesis in cells occurs by chemiosmosis.
978426395Protonmotive ForceThe potential energy stored in the form of a proton electrochemical gradient, generated by the pumping of hydrogen ions (H+) across a biological membrane during chemiosmosis.
978426396Alcohol FermentationGlycolysis followed by the reduction pyruvate to ethyl alcohol, regenerating NAD+ and releasing carbon dioxide
978426397Lactic Acid FermentationGlycolysis followed by the reduction of pyruvate to lactate, regenerating NAD+ with no release of of carbon dioxide.
978426398Obligate AnaerobesAn organism that only carries out fermentation or anaerobic respiration. cannot use oxygen and may be poisoned by it
978426399Facultative AnaerobesAn organism that makes ATP by aerobic respiration if oxygen is present but that switches to anaerobic respiration or fermentation if oxygen is not present
978426400Beta OxidationA metabolic sequence that breaks fatty acids down to two-carbon fragments that enter the citric acid cycle as acetyl CoA
993918304In cellular respiration, where does Glycolysis occur?In the cytosol
994082229What is pyruvate?- The end product of glycolysis -The first step in cellular respiration - Stands in the junction between anaerobic and aerobic pathways
994082230The Citric Acid Cycle also known as the Krebs cycle serves what purpose?...
1035649733OIL RIGOxidation is Loss of Electrons (OIL) RIG (Reduction is a Gain of Electrons)
1035649734Which process or processes return carbon to the atmosphere?Cellular Respiration
1035649735What are the 4 major steps of cellular respiration?1.Glycolysis- (occurs in the cytosol) 2. Pyruvate Oxidation - Formation of Acetyl Co-enzyme A (occurs in the mitochondrion) 3. TCA/Kreb's Cycle/ Citric Acid Cycle 4. Oxidative phosphorylation - Electron Transport Chain and Chemiosmosis - (occurs in the inner membrane of the mitochondrion)
1035649736In the Cellular Respiration Process, which coenzymes is an electron carrier?NADH and FADH2
1035649737How many ATP are produced by the citric acid cycle for each molecule of glucose?2
1035649738What is the correct sequence of steps as energy is extracted from glucose during cellular respiration.glycolysis → acetyl CoA → citric acid cycle → electron transport chain
1035649739What is the correct general equation for cellular respiration?C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + ATP energy
1035649740What is the correct basic equation for cellular respiration?Glucose + 6 Oxygen leads to 6 Carbon Dioxide +6 Water + 1 ATP
1035649741Which of the part of the cellular respiration process takes place in the cytosol of a eukaryotic cell?Glycolysis
1035649742In what organelle would you find acetyl CoA formation, the citric acid cycle, and the electron transport chain?The Mitochondrion
1035649743How would you describe glycolysis?This process splits glucose in half and produces 2 ATPs for each glucose.
1035649744How would you describe the citric acid cycleThis process produces some ATP and carbon dioxide in the mitochondrion.
1035649745How would you describe the electron transport chain?This process uses energy captured from electrons flowing to oxygen to produce most of the ATPs in cellular respiration
1035649746Which part of a eukaryotic cell is involved in cellular respiration?Mitochondria
1035651660Glucose and _______ are consumed during cellular respirationOxygen
1035655227In a eukaryotic cell, most of the ATP derived from glucose during cellular respiration is produced by ...The Electron Transport Chain
1035659880How much does a single glucose molecule produce in glycoloysis alone?a single glucose molecule in glycolysis produces a total of: 2 molecules of pyruvic acid, 2 molecules of ATP, 2 molecules of NADH and 2 molecules of water
1039593704The immediate energy source that drives ATP synthesis by ATP synthase during oxidative phosphorylation is theH+ concentration across the membrane holding ATP synthase.
1039593705Which metabolic pathway is common to both fermentation and cellular respiration of a glucose molecule?glycolysis
1039593706In mitochondria, exergonic redox reactionsprovide the energy that establishes the proton gradient.
1039593707The final electron acceptor of the electron transport chain that functions in aerobic oxidative phosphorylation isoxygen.
1039593708What is the oxidizing agent in the following reaction? Pyruvate + NADH + H+ S Lactate + NAD+pyruvate
1039593709When electrons flow along the electron transport chains of mitochondria, which of the following changes occurs? ATP synthase pumps protons by active transport. The pH of the matrix increases.The pH of the matrix increases.
1039593710Most CO2 from catabolism is released duringthe citric acid cycle.
1039593711A molecule becomes more oxidized when it _Loses an electron. During oxidation, an electron is removed.
1039593712In the overall process of glycolysis and cellular respiration, _____ is oxidized and _____ is reduced.glucose ... oxygen In cellular respiration, electrons and hydrogen are removed from glucose and added to oxygen.
1039593713Most of the ATP produced in cellular respiration comes from which of the following processes?...
1039593714Which of the following is a correct description of the events of cellular respiration and the sequence of events in cellular respiration? (eText Concept 9.1) oxidation of glucose to pyruvate; reduction of pyruvate; TCA cycle; oxidative phosphorylation glycolysis; oxidative phosphorylation; TCA cycle; oxidation of pyruvate. oxidation of glucose to pyruvate; oxidation of pyruvate; oxidation of acetyl-coA; oxidative phosphorylation oxidation of pyruvate; TCA cycle; oxidation of glucose to pyruvate; oxidative phosphorylation glycolysis; reduction of pyruvate; TCA cycle; oxidative phosphorylation1. oxidation of glucose to pyruvate; 2. oxidation of pyruvate; 3. oxidation of acetyl-coA; 4. oxidative phosphorylation
1039593715Oxygen gas (O2) is one of the strongest oxidizing agents known. The explanation for this is that _____. (eText Concept 9.1) oxygen gas contains a double bond oxygen acts as the final electron acceptor in cellular respiration the oxygen atom is very electronegative oxygen is so abundant in the atmosphere oxygen gas is composed of two atoms of oxygenThe oxygen atom is very electronegative. The high electronegativity of the oxygen atom is the reason that oxygen is such a good oxidizing agent (why it can oxidize so many compounds).
1039593716The function of cellular respiration is to _____. (eText Concept 9.1) reduce CO2 produce carbohydrates extract CO2 from the atmosphere synthesize macromolecules from monomers extract usable energy from glucoseExtract usable energy from glucose. The most prevalent and efficient catabolic pathway is cellular respiration, in which oxygen is consumed as a reactant, along with the organic fuel (frequently glucose).
1039593717During the reaction C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O, which compound is reduced as a result of the reaction? (eText Concept 9.1) carbon dioxide oxygen water glucose both glucose and carbon dioxideoxygen
1039593718Each ATP molecule contains about 1% of the amount of chemical energy available from the complete oxidation of a single glucose molecule. Cellular respiration produces about 32 ATP from one glucose molecule. What happens to the rest of the energy in glucose? (eText Concept 9.1) It is converted to starch. It is converted to heat. It is released as carbon dioxide and water It is stored as fat. It is used to make water from hydrogen ions and oxygen.It is converted to heat.
1039593719A small amount of ATP is made in glycolysis by which of the following processes? (eText Concept 9.1) transfer of electrons and hydrogen atoms to NAD+ transport of electrons through a series of carriers attachment of a free inorganic phosphate (Pi) group to ADP to make ATP transfer of a phosphate group from a fragment of glucose to ADP by substrate-level phosphorylation harnessing energy from the sunTransfer of a phosphate group from a fragment of glucose to ADP by substrate-level phosphorylation
1039593720Where do the reactions of glycolysis occur in a eukaryotic cell? (eText Concept 9.1) the cytosol across the inner membrane of the mitochondrion the matrix of the mitochondrion in the intermembrane space of the mitochondrion the inner membrane of the mitochondrionGlycolysis occurs in the cytosol.
1039593721Most of the NADH that delivers electrons to the electron transport chain comes from which of the following processes? (eText Concept 9.3) substrate-level phosphorylation the citric acid cycle glycolysis anabolic pathways oxidative phosphorylationThe citric acid cycle Both NADH and FADH2 are produced during the citric acid cycle.
1039593722In preparing pyruvate to enter the citric acid cycle, which of the following steps occurs? (eText Concept 9.3) Pyruvate is oxidized and decarboxylated, and the removed electrons are used to reduce an NAD+ to an NADH. Pyruvate is reduced and decarboxylated, and the resulting electrons oxidize an NAD+ to an NADH Pyruvate is oxidized and decarboxylated, and the resulting electrons are donated to NADH to produce NAD+. Pyruvate is reduced to acetyl-coA, which involves the reduction of pyruvate, the addition of a carbon dioxide from the environment, and its reduction by NADH. Pyruvate is ionized directly to acetyl-coA.Pyruvate is oxidized and decarboxylated, and the removed electrons are used to reduce an NAD+ to an NADH.
1039593723Why is the citric acid cycle called a cycle? (eText Concept 9.3)The four-carbon acid that accepts the acetyl CoA in the first step of the cycle is regenerated by the last step of the cycle.
1039593724In the citric acid cycle, for each pyruvate that enters the cycle, one ATP, three NADH, and one FADH2 are produced. For each glucose molecule that enters glycolysis, how many ATP, NADH, and FADH2 are produced in the citric acid cycle? (eText Concept 9.3)two ATP, six NADH, two FADH2
1039593725Where do the reactions of the citric acid cycle occur in eukaryotic cells?The matrix of the mitochondrion The citric acid cycle, which takes place in the mitochondrial matrix, completes the degradation of glucose.
1039593726How many molecules of ATP are gained by substrate-level phosphorylation from the complete breakdown of a single molecule of glucose in the presence of oxygen? (eText Concept 9.3)Four There is a net gain of two ATP from glycolysis and one per each molecule of acetyl CoA oxidized in the citric acid cycle for a total of four per glucose.
1039593727What is the major (but not the only) energy accomplishment of the citric acid cycle? (eText Concept 9.3)The formation of NADH and FADH2 Each turn of the citric acid cycle releases carbon dioxide, forms one ATP by oxidative phosphorylation, and passes electrons to three NAD+ and one FAD.
1039593728After completion of the citric acid cycle, most of the usable energy from the original glucose molecule is in the form of _____.NADH The citric acid cycle produces three NADH per turn of the cycle.
1039593729Which of the following accompanies the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl CoA before the citric acid cycle? (eText Concept 9.3) regeneration of NAD+ removal of coenzyme A release of CO2 and synthesis of NADH formation of CO2 and synthesis of ATP release of CO2 and release of coenzyme Arelease of CO2 and synthesis of NADH
1039593730If significant amounts of materials are removed from the citric acid cycle to produce amino acids for protein synthesis, which of the following will result? (eText Concept 9.6) Less ATP will be produced by the cell. Less CO2 will be produced by the cell. The four-carbon compound that combines with acetyl CoA will have to be made by some other process. The first two answers are correct. The first three answers are correct.The first three answers are correct.
1039798920A gram of fat oxidized by respiration produces approximately twice as much ATP as a gram of carbohydrate. Which of the following best explains this observation? (eText Concept 9.6) Fats are better electron donors to oxygen than are sugars. Fats do not form true macromolecules as sugars do. Fats are closely related to lipid molecules, the basic building blocks of cellular membranes. Fats are less soluble in water than sugars. Fats are produced when cells take in more food than they need.Fats are better electron donors to oxygen than are sugars. Correct. Fats contain more hydrogen and less oxygen than sugars—it is the transfer of electrons from good donors such as hydrogen atoms to good acceptors such as oxygen that provides the energy in respiration.
1039798921When protein molecules are used as fuel for cellular respiration, _____ are produced as waste. (eText Concept 9.6) ethanol and CO2 molecules of lactate fatty acids amino groups sugar moleculesamino groups The amino group is a residual product of amino acid catabolism.
1039798922Of the metabolic pathways listed below, which is the only pathway found in all organisms? (eText Concept 9.5) the electron transport chain cellular respiration fermentation the citric acid cycle glycolysisglycolysis Ancient prokaryotes probably used glycolysis to make ATP long before oxygen was present in Earth's atmosphere. Glycolysis is the most widespread metabolic pathway.
1039798923If muscle cells in the human body consume O2 faster than it can be supplied, which of the following is likely to result? (eText Concept 9.5) The muscle cells will have more trouble making enough ATP to meet their energy requirements. The cells will not be able to carry out oxidative phosphorylation. The cells will consume glucose at an increased rate. Only the first two answers are correct. The first three answers are correct.The first three answers are correct. The muscle cells will have more trouble making enough ATP to meet their energy requirements. The cells will not be able to carry out oxidative phosphorylation. The cells will consume glucose at an increased rate.
1039798924In brewing beer, maltose (a disaccharide of glucose) is _____.the substrate for alcoholic fermentation
1039798925In glycolysis in the absence of oxygen, cells need a way to regenerate which compound? (eText Concept 9.5)NAD+
1039798926Sports physiologists at an Olympic training center wanted to monitor athletes to determine at what point their muscles were functioning anaerobically. They could do this by checking for a buildup of which of the following compounds? (eText Concept 9.5)lactate. In humans, muscle cells switch to lactate fermentation after becoming anaerobic.
1039798927Fermentation is essentially glycolysis plus an extra step in which pyruvate is reduced to form lactate or alcohol and carbon dioxide. This last step _____. (eText Concept 9.5)enables the cell to recycle the reduced NADH to oxidized NAD+
1039798928During respiration in eukaryotic cells, the electron transport chain is located in or on the _____. (eText Concept 9.4)inner membrane of the mitochondrion
1039798929Which of the following is the source of the energy that produces the chemiosmotic gradient in mitochondria? (eText Concept 9.4)Electrons moving down the electron transport chain
1039798930Which of the following best describes the electron transport chain? (eText Concept 9.4) Acetyl CoA is fully oxidized to CO2. Glucose is broken down to a three-carbon compound in preparation for the citric acid cycle. Electrons are passed from one carrier to another, releasing a little energy at each step. Hydrogen atoms are added to CO2 to make an energy-rich compound. Electrons are pumped across a membrane by active transport.Electrons are passed from one carrier to another, releasing a little energy at each step.
1039798931During aerobic respiration, molecular oxygen (O2) is used for which of the following purposes? (eText Concept 9.4) at the end of glycolysis to oxidize pyruvate at the end of the electron transport chain to accept electrons and form H2O between glycolysis and the citric acid cycle to split a carbon from pyruvate, producing CO2 as a source of O2 in every reaction that produces CO2 at the end of the citric acid cycle to regenerate citric acidat the end of the electron transport chain to accept electrons and form H2O
1039827425Word Roots: aero-air (aerobic: chemical reaction using oxygen)
1039827427Word Roots: an-not (anaerobic: chemical reaction not using oxygen)
1039827429Word Roots: chemi-chemical (chemiosmosis: the production of ATP using the energy of hydrogen ion gradients across membranes to phosphorylate ADP)
1039827431Word Roots: glyco-sweet;
1039827433Word Roots: -lysissplit (glycolysis: the splitting of glucose into pyruvate)

A&P II: Metabolism--> Cellular Respiration and Fermentation Flashcards

Vocabulary: aerobic respiration, anaerobic respiration, fermentation, oxidation, reduction, reducing agent, oxidizing agent, redox reaction, electron transport chain, NAD (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide), glycolysis, Kreb cycle (citric acid cycle), oxidative phosphorylation, substrate-level phosphorylation, chemiosmosis, ATP synthase, cytochromes, proton-motive force, obligate aerobe, obligate anaerobe, facultative anaerobe, beta oxidation, biosynthesis
Objectives: After attending lectures and studying the chapter, the student should be able to:
1. Define cellular respiration.
a. State which organisms undergo cellular respiration.
b. Distinguish between the site of cellular respiration in prokaryotic cells and in eukaryotic cells.
c. Distinguish between the terms aerobic and anaerobic.
d. Write the general chemical equation for aerobic cellular respiration.
e. Write the general chemical equation for lactic acid fermentation and state which organisms can undergo this process.
f. Write the general chemical equation for alcohol fermentation and state which organisms can undergo this process.
2. Relating to cellular energy:
a. Explain the chemical energy relationship between glucose and ATP.
b. Explain the chemical energy role of ATP in driving cellular reactions.
c. Describe the structure of ATP, ADP, and AMP.
d.Explain why ATP is considered the "energy currency" of the cell and glucose is not.
e. State how many ATPs are produced from 1 glucose molecule during:
* aerobic cellular respiration in prokaryotic cells
* aerobic cellular respiration in eukaryotic cells
* fermentation
3. Describe the making of ATP through substrate-level phosphorylation.
4. Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis):
a. Define oxidation and reduction and describe the redox reactions of an electron transport chain.
b.

Terms : Hide Images
1052539609Catabolic pathways yield energy by oxidizing organic fuelsCatabolic pathways are a set of metabolic pathways that breaks down molecules into smaller units to release energy
1052539610Compare and contrast aerobic and anaerobic respirationBoth processes include glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and oxidated phosphorylation. In aerobic respiration the final electron acceptor is molecular oxygen O2; in anaerobic respiration the final electron Accceptor is a different substance.
1052539611Describe the difference between the two processes in cellular respiration that produce ATP: oxidative phosphorylation and substrate-level phosphorylationMost of the ATP produced in cellular respiration come from oxidative phosphorylation, in which the energy released from redox reactions in an electron transport chain is used to produce ATP. In substrate level phosphorylation, an enzyme dirctly transfers a phosphate group to ADP fro an intermediate substrate. All ATP production in glycolysis occurs by substrate-level phosphorylation, this form of ATP production also occurs at one step in the citric acid cycle.
1052539612Explain concept 9.2: Glycolysis harvests chemical energy by oxidizing glucose to pyruvate...
1052539613During the redox reaction in glycolysis, which molecule acts as the oxidizing agent? Which molecule acts as the reducing agent?NAD+ acts as the oxidizing agent in step 6, accepting electrons from glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, which thus acts as the reducing agent
1052539614During the redox reaction in glycolysis, Which molecule acts as the reducing agent?glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, which acts as the reducing agent
1052539615What is the source of energy for the formation of ATP and NADH in glycolysis?The oxidation of the three carbon sugar glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, yields energy. In this oxidation, electrons and H+ are transferred to NAD+, forming NADH, and a phosphate group is attached to the oxidized substrate. ATP is then formed b y substrate level phosphorylation when this phosphate group is transferred to ADP
1052539616Explain concept 9.3: After pyruvate is oxidized, the citric acid cycle completes the energy yielding oxidation of organic molecules...
1052539617Name the molecules that conserve most of the energy from the citric acid cycle's redox reactions. How is this energy converted to a form that can be used to make ATP?NADH and FADH2; they will donate electrons to the electron transport chain
1052539618What processes in your cells produce the CO2 that you exhaleCO2 is released from the pyruvate that is the end product of glycoloysis, and CO2 is also released during the citric acid cycle
1052539619Briefly explain the mechanism by which ATP synthase produces ATP. List three locations in which ATP synthases are found....
1052539620Explain concept 9.5: Fermentation and anaerobic respiration enable cells to produce ATP without the use of oxygen...
1052539621Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis): define oxidation and reduction and describe the redox reactions of an electron transport chain....
1052539622Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis): relate the electrochemical gradient to the facilitated diffusion of H+ ions across a membrane....
1052539623Relating to oxidative phosphorylation (electron transport chain + chemiosmosis): relate facilitated diffusion of H+ ions through the ATP synthase protein channel to the making of ATP....
1052539624Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: describe the process of glycolysis, including the major molecules involved and the energy-storing molecules produced....
1052539625Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: describe the process of the Krebs cycle, including the major molecules involved and the energy-storing molecules produced, and explain why the Krebs cycle is considered a cycle....
1052539626Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: describe the roles of NADH, FADH2, and O2 in the electron transport chain part of oxidative phosphorylation...
1052539627Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: show the relationship between the electron transport chain, active transport, and facilitated diffusion in the oxidative phosphorylation process of making ATP....
1052539628Relating to aerobic cellular respiration: state the number of ATPs produced during glycolysis, the transition reaction, the Krebs cycle, and the oxidative-phosphorylation process....
1052539629FermentationPartial degradation of sugars or other organic fuel that occurs without the use of oxygen
1052539630Aerobic RespirationCatabolic pathway in which oxygen is consumed as a reactant along with the organic fuel
1052539631Cellular RespirationIncludes both aerobic and anaerobic processes
1052539632Redox ReactionsA chemical reaction involving the complete or partial transfer of one or more electrons from one reactant to another; short for reduction-oxidation reaction
1052539633OxidationThe complete or partial loss of electrons from a substance involved in a redox reaction
1052539634ReductionThe complete or partial addition of electrons to a substance involved in a redox reaction
1052539635Reducing AgentThe electron donor in a redox reaction
1052539636Oxidizing AgentThe electron receptor in a redox reaction
1052539637NAD+Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, a coenzyme that cycles easily between oxidized (NAD+) and reduced (NADH) states, thus acting as an electron carrier.
1052539638Electron Transport ChainA sequence of electron carrier molecules (membrane proteins) that shuttle electrons down a series of redox reactions that release energy used to make ATP
1052539639GlycolysisA series of reactions that ultimately splits glucose into pyruvate. Occurs in almost all living cells, serving as the starting point for fermentation or cellular respiration
1052539640Oxidative PhosphorylationThe production of ATP using energy derived from the redox reactions of an electron transport chain; the third major stage of cellular respiration
1052539641Substrate-level phosphorylationThe enzyme catalyzed formation of ATP by direct transfer of a phosphate group to ADP from an intermediate substrate in catabolism
1052539642Acetyl CoAAcetyl coenzyme A; the entry compound for the citric acid cycle in cellular respiration, formed from a fragment of pyruvate attached to a coenzyme.
1052539643CytochromesAn iron-containing protein that is a component of electron transport chains in the mitochondria and chloroplasts of eukaryotic cells and the plasma membranes of prokaryotic cells
1052539644ATP SynthaseA complex of several membrane proteins that functions in chemiosmosis with adjacent electron transport chains, using the energy of a hydrogen ion (proton) concentration gradient to make ATP. ATP synthases are found in the inner mitochondrial membranes of eukaryotic cells and in the plasma membranes of prokaryotes.
1052539645ChemiosmosisAn energy coupling mechanism that uses energy stored in the form of a hydrogen ion gradient across a membrane to drive cellular work; such as the synthesis of ATP. Under aerobic conditions, most ATP synthesis in cells occurs by chemiosmosis.
1052539646Protonmotive ForceThe potential energy stored in the form of a proton electrochemical gradient, generated by the pumping of hydrogen ions (H+) across a biological membrane during chemiosmosis.
1052539647Alcohol FermentationGlycolysis followed by the reduction pyruvate to ethyl alcohol, regenerating NAD+ and releasing carbon dioxide
1052539648Lactic Acid FermentationGlycolysis followed by the reduction of pyruvate to lactate, regenerating NAD+ with no release of of carbon dioxide.
1052539649Facultative AnaerobesAn organism that makes ATP by aerobic respiration if oxygen is present but that switches to anaerobic respiration or fermentation if oxygen is not present
1052539650Beta OxidationA metabolic sequence that breaks fatty acids down to two-carbon fragments that enter the citric acid cycle as acetyl CoA
1052539651What is pyruvate?- The end product of glycolysis -The first step in cellular respiration - Stands in the junction between anaerobic and aerobic pathways

#12 Zachary Taylor Flashcards

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348325407Zachary TaylorWhig 1849-1850. 64 years old from Luisianna Celebrity candidate
348325408Zachary TaylorWar hero. Appealed to both North and south
348325409Zachary TaylorHe was slovenly, a poor speaker and never registered vote. He was a relaxed manager.
348325410Zachary TaylorOld Ruff and "Ready" was his nickname. Had no polish of a politician.
348325411Zachary TaylorDidn't vote in his own election. He was a Washington insider.
348325412Zachary TaylorHe differed to other and said he would not exercise his veto power. He said congress should decise the slavery issue.
348325413Zachary TaylorMissouri compromis was beginning to crumble becuase of expansion of slavery.
348325414Zachary Taylor1850 compromise by Henry Clay which would bring California in with concessions to south.
348325415Zachary TaylorTaylor threatened to veto the compromise despite the threat by the south to secede. Taylor threatened to hang secessionist including his own son in law Jefferson Davis
348325416Zachary TaylorHe affirmed the integrity of the Union by standing up against slavery and becoming an ardent .
348325417Zachary TaylorUnionist
348325418Zachary TaylorTaylor presided over the ground breaking ceremony of the Washington Monument and cooled off with milk and strawberries. Within an hour he had severe stomach pains. Taylor died 5 days later and some suspected foul play. 1991 Taylors body was exhumed and found no sign of foul play.

Presidential Chronology Washington - Zachary Taylor Flashcards

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994183664Organized the national governmentGeorge Washington
994183665PrecedentGeorge Washington
994183666Judiciary act (1789)George Washington
994183667French Revolution beginsGeorge Washington
994183668First official censusGeorge Washington
994183669Samuel Slater opens first mill in Rhode IslandGeorge Washington
994183670Report on public creditGeorge Washington
994183671Bank of the United StatesGeorge Washington
994183672Bill of rightsGeorge Washington
994183673Report on manufacturersGeorge Washington
994183674Formation of first political parties: federalist and republicanGeorge Washington
994183675Eli Whitney- cotton ginGeorge Washington
994183676Fugitive salve lawGeorge Washington
994183677French Revolution: U.S. declares neutralityGeorge Washington
994183678Chisholm v. GeorgiaGeorge Washington
994183679Whiskey rebellionGeorge Washington
994183680Jay's treatyGeorge Washington
994183681Battle of fallen timbersGeorge Washington
994183682Treaty of GreenvilleGeorge Washington
994183683Pinckney's treatyGeorge Washington
994183684Admitted 3 new states- Vermont, Kentucky, TennesseeGeorge Washington
994183685Farewell addressGeorge Washington
994183686XYZ affairJohn Adams
994183687Alien and sedition actsJohn Adams
99418368811th amendmentJohn Adams
994183689Eli Whitney's interchangeable partsJohn Adams
994183690Quasi war with FranceJohn Adams
994183691Virginia and Kentucky resolutionsJohn Adams
994183692Gabriel Prosser rebellionJohn Adams
994183693Treaty of San IldefonsoJohn Adams
994183694Second great aweakeningJohn Adams
994183695Judiciary act (1801)John Adams
994183696Midnight appointeesJohn Adams
994183697Republican revolutionThomas Jefferson
994183698Repeal of judiciary act of 1801Thomas Jefferson
994183699Yazoo land compromiseThomas Jefferson
994183700QuidsThomas Jefferson
994183701Louisiana purchaseThomas Jefferson
994183702Marburg v. MadisonThomas Jefferson
994183703Lewis and Clark expeditionThomas Jefferson
994183704Hamilton and Burr duelThomas Jefferson
99418370512th amendmentThomas Jefferson
994183706British orders in councilThomas Jefferson
994183707Barbary pirates of North AfricaThomas Jefferson
994183708Zebulon Pike's explorationThomas Jefferson
994183709Aaron Burr conspiracy trialThomas Jefferson
994183710Chesapeake affair with LeopardThomas Jefferson
994183711Embargo actThomas Jefferson
994183712French-British warThomas Jefferson
994183713Robert Fulton invests steamboat Clermont on the Hudson RiverThomas Jefferson
994183714International slave trade endedThomas Jefferson
994183715Non-Intercourse actThomas Jefferson
994183716Fletcher v. PeckJames Madison
994183717Macon's bill #2James Madison
994183718Bank of U.S. ExpiresJames Madison
994183719Battle of TippecanoeJames Madison
994183720Cumberland road beginsJames Madison
994183721War of 1812James Madison
994183722U.S. Invades CanadaJames Madison
994183723War hawksJames Madison
994183724British burn Washington, D.C.James Madison
994183725Hartford conventionJames Madison
994183726Treaty of GhentJames Madison
994183727Battle of New OrleansJames Madison
994183728Tariff of 1816James Madison
994183729Second bank of the U.S.James Madison
994183730American colonization society foundedJames Madison
994183731Era of good feelingsJames Monroe
994183732Erie Canal beginsJames Monroe
994183733Rush-Bagot treatyJames Monroe
994183734British-American convention of 1818James Monroe
994183735Andrew Jackson invades FloridaJames Monroe
994183736Adam-Onis treatyJames Monroe
994183737Dartmouth college v. WoodwardJames Monroe
994183738McCulloch v. MarylandJames Monroe
994183739Panic of 1819James Monroe
994183740Missouri compromiseJames Monroe
994183741Denmark Vesey rebellionJames Monroe
994183742Mexico opens Texas to American settlersJames Monroe
994183743Monroe DoctrineJames Monroe
994183744Gibbons v. OgdenJames Monroe
994183745"Corrupt Bargain"James Monroe
994183746Federal support for internal improvementsJohn Quincy Adams
994183747Tariff of abominationsJohn Quincy Adams
994183748South Carolina exposition and protestJohn Quincy Adams
994183749Completion of Erie CanalJohn Quincy Adams
994183750End of era of good feelingsJohn Quincy Adams
994183751American temperance society formedJohn Quincy Adams
994183752James Fenimore Cooper Last of the MohicansJohn Quincy Adams
994183753Nathaniel Hawthorn The Scarlet LetterJohn Quincy Adams
994183754American systemJohn Quincy Adams
994183755Baltimore and Ohio railroads beginJohn Quincy Adams
994183756Jacksonian democracyAndrew Jackson
994183757Old HickoryAndrew Jackson
994183758Spoils systemAndrew Jackson
994183759Jacksonian reformsAndrew Jackson
994183760Eaton affairAndrew Jackson
994183761Webster-Hayne debateAndrew Jackson
994183762Maysville Road vetoAndrew Jackson
994183763Indian removal actAndrew Jackson
994183764Nat Turner rebellionAndrew Jackson
994183765Alexis de Tocqueville tours U.S.Andrew Jackson
994183766William Lloyd Garrison The LiberatorAndrew Jackson
994183767Cherokee Nation v. GeorgiaAndrew Jackson
994183768Worcester v. GeorgiaAndrew Jackson
994183769Secession and nullificationAndrew Jackson
994183770Vetoes bank of U.S. Re-charterAndrew Jackson
994183771Pet banksAndrew Jackson
994183772Black Hawk WarAndrew Jackson
994183773New York Sun, first penny newspaper createdAndrew Jackson
994183774Compromise tariffAndrew Jackson
994183775Force BillAndrew Jackson
994183776American Anti-Slavery society foundedAndrew Jackson
994183777Whig party createdAndrew Jackson
994183778The mechanical reaperAndrew Jackson
994183779Second Seminole WarAndrew Jackson
994183780Bank of United States expiresAndrew Jackson
994183781Bureau of Indian affairs createdAndrew Jackson
994183782Texas revolution/ independenceAndrew Jackson
994183783Specie circularAndrew Jackson
994183784Gag ruleAndrew Jackson
994183785Trail of tearsAndrew Jackson
994183786Ralph Waldo Emerson's "The American scholar"Martin Van Buren
994183787Independent treasury systemMartin Van Buren
994183788Interchangeable partsMartin Van Buren
994183789Washington temperance societyMartin Van Buren
994183790Panic of 1837Martin Van Buren
994183791Shortest presidency-four weeksWilliam Henry Harrison
994183792Log cabin campaignWilliam Henry Harrison
994183793Rejection of Whig program for national bank, high tariffs, and internal improvements lead to presidents expulsion from party and attempted impeachmentJohn Tyler
994183794Webster-ash burton treatyJohn Tyler
994183795Commonwealth v. HuntJohn Tyler
994183796Priggish v. PennsylvaniaJohn Tyler
994183797Tariff billJohn Tyler
994183798Texas admitted to unionJohn Tyler
994183799"Oregon Fever"John Tyler
994183800Manifest DestinyJames K. Polk
994183801John o'sullivan coins "manifest destiny"James K. Polk
994183802Frederick Douglass Narrative of the life of Frederick DouglasJames K. Polk
994183803Western expansionJames K. Polk
994183804Mass Irish immigration due to famineJames K. Polk
994183805Mexico rejects John Slidell's missionJames K. Polk
994183806Oregon territory "54, 40 or fight" compromise for 49th parellelJames K. Polk
994183807Wilmont provisoJames K. Polk
994183808Mexican warJames K. Polk
994183809Bear flag republic in CaliforniaJames K. Polk
994183810Lewis class's principle of "popular sovereignty"James K. Polk
994183811Wisconsin and Iowa admitted as free statesJames K. Polk
994183812Treaty of Guadalupe HidalgoJames K. Polk
994183813Anti-Slavery Whigs & Democrats form free soil party organizedJames K. Polk
994183814Discovery of gold at Sutter's mill in CaliforniaJames K. Polk
994183815Seneca falls conventionJames K. Polk
994183816Gold rushZachary Taylor
994183817Henry David Thoreau "civil disobedience"Zachary Taylor
994183818Clayton-Bulwer treatyZachary Taylor
994183819Introduction of the compromiseZachary Taylor
994183820Personally opposes compromiseZachary Taylor
994183821Nashville conventionZachary Taylor
994183822Omnibus Bill-Henry ClayZachary Taylor

Extending the Analysis of Aggregate Supply Flashcards

Just study the -CENSORED- cards.

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363085768Short-run aggregate supplyThe relationship between the quantity of real GDP supplied and the price level when the money wage rate, the prices of other resources, and potential GDP remain constant.
363085769Long-run aggregate supplyinputs prices (ex: wages) adjust with output prices and vice versa, this eliminates the incentive to produce more or less output at higher or lower price levels since purchasing power of per-unit profits has not changed
363085770Short-run aggregate demandincrease in investment shifts AD to the right, hgher price level results, workers want higher wages, , firms will charge higher prices, AS shift back to the left
363085771Long-run aggregate demandIn long-run, shift in aggregate demand affect the overall price level but not output. In short-run, shifts in aggregate demand cause fluctuations in price leave and economy's output of goods
363085772Demand-pull inflationincreases in the price level (inflation) resulting from an excess of demand over output at the existing price level, caused by an increase in aggregate demand
363085773Cost-push inflationWhen prices rise due to an increase in the cost of production.
363085774Phillips CurveA graph showing the relationship between inflation and unemployment . The theory states that unemployment can be reduced in the short run by increasing price level (inflation) at a faster rate. Conversely, inflation can be lowered at the cost of possibly increased unemployment and slower economic growth. Named after A. W. Phillips.
363085775Aggregate Supply Shocksare sudden large increases in resource costs that jolt an economy's short-run aggregate supply curve leftward.
363085776Long-run vertical Philips CurveCurve that shows in the long run, there is NO tradeoff between inflation and unemployment. Any rate of inflation is consistent with the NRU - Increase in AD beyond NRU → temporarily boost profits, output, employment → nominal wages increase → profits fall → back to original level of unemployment
363085777Disinflationa reduction of prices intended to improve the balance of payments.
363085778Supply-side economicsAn economics philosophy suggesting tax cuts can help an economy by raising supply. -CENSORED- this -CENSORED-; doesn't work.
363085779Laffer CurveA curved graph that illustrates the theory that, if tax rates rise beyond a certain level, they discourage economic growth, thereby reducing government revenues.

American Pageant (13th Edition) Chapters 27 & 28 - Greenstein Flashcards

Greenstein '12

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350226343Expansionismpolicy of extending a nation's boundaries
350226344Isolationisma policy of nonparticipation in international economic and political relations
350226345Imperialismany instance of aggressive extension of authority
350226346Territorya land area under control of a particular group or government
350226347Protectoratea state or territory partly controlled by (but not a possession of) a stronger state but autonomous in internal affairs
350226348Sphere of influenceA foreign region in which a nation has control over trade and other economic activities.
350226349Open door policyA policy proposed by the US in 1899, under which ALL nations would have equal opportunities to trade in China.
350226350Boxer rebellionA 1900 Uprising in China aimed at ending foreign influence in the country.
350226351Cubathe largest island in the West Indies
350226352White mans burdenidea that many European countries had a duty to spread their religion and culture to those less civilized
350226353Spanish american warWar fought between the US and Spain in Cuba and the Philippines. It lasted less than 3 months and resulted in Cuba's independence as well as the US annexing Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines.
350226354PhillipinesPacific islands that were acquired by the United States as a result of the Spanish American War
350226355Guam and puerto rico2 territories we still have today after the Spanish American War.
350226356Dollar diplomacyTerm used to describe the efforts of the US to further its foreign policy through use of economic power by gaurenteeing loans to foreign countries
350226357Jingoismextreme patriotism; favoring an aggressive, warlike foreign policy
350226358Yellow journalismJournalism that exploits, distorts, or exaggerates the news to create sensations and attract readers.
350226359Josiah strongAmerican clergyman who preached Anglo-Saxon superiority and called for stronger U.S. missionary effort overseas
350226360Alfred mahanAmerican Naval officer and historian. He is most famous for his book "The Influence of Sea Power on History" which defined Naval strategy. His philosophies had a major influence on the Navies of many nations resulting in a igniting of naval races between countries.
350226361Pan-american conferencethis was an international organization that dealt with trade; organized by james blaine; created to encourage cooperation and trust with the manufacturers
350226362Great rapprochementAfter decades of occasionally "twisting the lion's tail," American diplomats began to cultivate close, cordial relations with Great Britain at the end of the nineteenth century—a relationship that would intensify further during World War I.
350226363Mckinley tariff of 1890raised tariffs to the highest level they had ever been. Big business favored these tariffs because they protected U.S. businesses from foreign competition.
350226364Queen liliuokalaniQueen of Hawaii who gave the U.S. naval rights to Pearl Harbor in 1887. Deposed by American settlers in 1893.
350226365Teller amendmentThis Amendment was drafter by Henry M. Teller which declared that the US had no desire for control in Cuba & pledged the US would leave the island alone.
350226366Emilio AguinaldoLeader of the Filipino independence movement against Spain (1895-1898). He proclaimed the independence of the Philippines in 1899, but his movement was crushed and he was captured by the United States Army in 1901. (p. 743)
350226367Foraker actThis act established Puerto Rico as an unorganized U.S. territory. Puerto Ricans were not given U.S. citizenship, but the U.S. president appointed the island's governor and governing council.
350226368Remember the maineA slogan of the Spanish-American war referring to the sinking of a battleship in Cuba. Stirred up by yellow journalism, this lead McKinley to declare war.
350226369Platt amendmentAllowed the United States to intervene in Cuba and gave the United States control of the naval base at Guantanamo Bay.
350226370Elihu rootThis New York corporate lawyer was appointed as secretary of war to supervise a major overhaul of the armed forces.
350226371Open door noteMessage delivered by John Hay in the summer of 1899 to the nations of the world, begging them to respect Chinese rights and influence in the spirit of fair competition.
350226372Panama canal zoneColombian government granted a French company the right to build this through Panama. The company failed and Roosevelt pressured Colombia for its rights. The Colombian government declined. A group of Panamanians, Europeans and Colombians soldiers working closely with the State Department revolted and proclaimed Panama an independent country. When the Roosevelt administration recognized the country as a sovereign state, the U.S. was giving a permanent lease to a zone. The treaty gave the United States the right to build and operate it, to control the zone as if it were U.S. Territory, and to annex more land if necessary for operations and defense.
350226373Hay-banau-varilla treatyJohn Hay and Frenchman, Bunau Varilla, negotiated the terms of building the canal and the zone for building it, Says the U.S. can build canal through Panama if they can stay independent. No Panamanian ever signed the treaty.
350226374Yellow fevercaused by a virus transmitted by a mosquito. Many died in Panama.
350226375Roosevelt corollaryRoosevelt's 1904 extension of the Monroe Doctrine, stating that the United States has the right to protect its economic interests in South And Central America by using military force
350226376Great white fleet16 American battleships, painted white, sent around the world to display American naval power

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