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Ecology Unit Vocabulary Flashcards

Important vocabulary for the Unit 1-Ecology.

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438739167Food WebA diagram showing all of the interconnected food chains in an ecosystem
438739168BiodiversityLarge variety of organisms and species in an ecosystem
438739169DecomposerAn organism that breaks down dead organisms
438739170Energy PyramidA diagram that shows how energy decreases as it travels through the trophic levels of a food chain
438739171Food ChainA diagram showing how energy passes from one organism to the next in an ecosystem
438739172OmnivoreAn organism that eats both plants and animals
438739173CarnivoreAn organism that eats only other animals
438739174HerbivoreAn organism that eats only other plants
438739175CompetitionWhen two organisms fight over the same resource
438739176CommunityAll of the different populations of organisms living in an area.
438739177BiosphereAll of the living space on earth.
438739178EcosystemLiving and nonliving things interacting in an area
438739179PopulationAll of the members of the same species in an area.
43873918010% ruleThe amount of energy that is transferred from one trophic level to another
438739181PreyThe organism that is hunted
438739182PredatorThe organism that hunts others for food.
438739183AdaptationA trait that helps an organism survive.
438739184Limiting FactorThe scarcest resource that limits a populations size.
438739185Carrying CapacityThe largest population size an ecosystem can hold.
438739186ParasitismA type of relationship where one organism benefits while the other organism is harmed.
438739187CommensalismA type of symbiosis where one species benefits and the other is not helped or harmed.
438739188MutualismA type of symbiosis where two organisms benefit from their relationship with each other.
438739189SymbiosisA relationship where to species interact and one is benefitted.
438739190BioticLiving part of the environment; includes anything made by a living organism
438739191AbioticNon living part of the environment
438739192EcologyThe study of how living things interact with other living things and the environment.
438739193NutrientsChemicals that living things need and use to live and grow. An example is nitrogen.
438739194AutotrophAny organism able to make its own food (aka Producer)
438739195HeterotrophAn organism that has to eat other living things to survive (aka consumer)
438739196EnergyUsed by organisms to do everything it needs to live
438739197GlucoseA type of sugar created by plants to store energy from the sun.
438739198Tertiary ConsumerThird level consumer. Often top of the food chain
438739199Primary ConsumerThe 1st level consumer. Eats producers
438739200Secondary ConsumerEats 1st level consumers. Often is a predator and a prey
438739201Quaternary Consumer4th level consumers. Food chains don't always go this far
438739202ScavengerAn animal that eats other dead animals.
438739203organismone individual living thing
438739205metabolismall of the al processes occuring within a living organism to maintain life
438739206HeterotrophOrganism that must eat other living things for food/survival
582167072nitrogen-fixing bacteriaa microscopic organism that can take nitrogen gas from the atmosphere and convert it into a solid form for plants to use.
582193222primary successionthe development of communities in an area with no soil or biotic elements (e.g. bare rock).
582193223climax communitya stable, mature community in a successive series that has reached equilibrium.
582193224biological magnificationprocess by which pollutants become more concentrated in successive trophic levels of a food web

APUSH Ch. 24 Review Flashcards

AP US History
American Pageant 13th Ed.
Chapter 24 Review
(Vocab + Questions)
Also used:
http://wikinotes.wikidot.com/chapter-24-13

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124288557transcontinental railroadRailroad connecting the west and east coasts of the continental US; main goal for rails
124288558Union Pacific RailroadCongress commissioned this railroad to push westward from Omaha, Nebraska to California
124288559Central Pacific Railroadstarted in California, and pushed eastward; eventually connected with the Union Pacific Railroad in Promentary Point, Utah
124288560Leland Stanfordheaded up the railroad efforts from California
124288561Northern Pacific Railroadrailroad from Lake Superior to Puget Sound
124288562Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Ferailroad from Kansas to California
124288563Southern Pacificfrom New Orleans to San Francisco
124288564Great Northernfrom Duluth, MN to Seattle
124288565Cornelius Vanderbiltbegan consolidating the New York Central line; this led to cheaper fares/rates and faster travel times
124288566steel railsreplaced the older technology of iron rails
124288567standardized gaugeused to measure the distance between tracks
124288568air brakeinvention that greatly increased efficiency and safety in trains
124288569Pullman Palace Carsluxury passenger cars that were built and were very popular for travelers
124288570time zonesrailroads led to the creating of this to help coordinate times between different areas
124288571kickbacksfrequent bribes given to governmental officials and major customers
124288572poolswhere competitors agreed to cooperate as if they were one mega company
124288573The GrangeOriginally a social organization between farmers, it developed into a political movement for government ownership of railroads
124288574Wabash case1886 supreme court case that decreed that individual states had no power to regulate interstate commerce
124288575Interstate Commerce Act1877 act passed by Congress that outlawed rebates and pools
124288576Richard OlneyBegan as a leading corporate lawyer who noted that the Interstate Commerce Act could help the railroads
124288577Alexander Graham Bellinvented the telephone as a part-time hobby while teaching the deaf to speak
124288578Thomas Edisoninventor of the light bulb as well as many, many other inventions
124288579Liquid capital(money or a millionaire class) emerged to build new businesses
124288580typewriterinvention which helped bring women to work
124288581Andrew CarnegieBuilt a steel mill empire; US Steel Corporation
124288582John D. RockefellerWas an American industrialist and philanthropist. Revolutionized the petroleum industry and defined the structure of modern philanthropy; founded the Standard Oil Company and nearly monopolized the Oil Industry
124288583Standard Oil CompanyFounded by John D. Rockefeller. Largest unit in the American oil industry in 1881. Known as A.D. Trust, it was outlawed by the Supreme Court of Ohio in 1899. Replaced by the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey.
124288584vertical integrationabsorption into a single firm of several firms involved in all aspects of a product's manufacture from raw materials to distribution; Rockefeller used it to either force a competitor out of business or buy them out to grow even larger
124288585interlocking directoratesplaced own men on boards of directors of rival competitors
124358165J.P. Morganan American financier, banker, philanthropist, and art collector who dominated corporate finance and industrial consolidation during his time; used interlocking directorates
124358166Bessemer Processan industrial process for making steel using a converter to blast air through through molten iron and thus burning the excess carbon and impurities
124358167economies of scalewhere large companies produce a cheaper product and thus put even more pressure on the "little guy"
124358168horizontal integrationabsorption into a single firm of several firms involved in the same level of production and sharing resources at that level
124358169Gustavus SwiftIn the 1800s he enlarged fresh meat markets through branch slaughterhouses and refrigeration. He monopolized the meat industry.
124358170Philip Armourmeat-packing entrepreneur; worth $50 million when died in 1901 due to innovation and efficiency of his company
124358171Gospel of WealthThis was a book written by Carnegie that described the responsibility of the rich to be philanthropists. This softened the harshness of Social Darwinism as well as promoted the idea of philanthropy.
124358172Social DarwinismThe application of ideas about evolution and "survival of the fittest" to human societies - particularly as a justification for their imperialist expansion
124358173Russell ConwellHe was a Revered and a staunch advocate of Social Darwinism. He became rich by delievering his sermon/lecture "Acres of Diamonds" thousands of times; his theme was that people earn their lots in life, either good or bad.
124358174plutocracya political system governed by the wealthy people
124358175Sherman Anti-Trust ActAct passed in 1890 that attempted to outlaw trusts or monopolies
124358176James Buchanan DukeFormed the American Tabacco Company, controlled 90% of the cigarette market
124358177Henry Gradyeditor of the Atlanta Constitution, urged Southerners to beat the Yankees at their own game of industry
124358178Charles Dana GibsonUnited States illustrator remembered for his creation of the 'Gibson girl'
124358179ironclad oathswhere workers pledged to not join a union
124358180National Labor Unionorganized in 1866 have about 600,000 members agitated for arbitration of disputes and an 8 hour workday
124358181Knights of LaborUnion open to everyone but "non producers": liquor dealers, professional gamblers, lawyers, bankers, and stockbrokers; they sought workers' cooperatives (to pool their money and resources), better working conditions, and the 8 hour workday
124358182Terence Powderlya well-known national figure as leader of the Knights of Labor from 1883-1893
124358183Haymarket Square Incident(1886) Chicago police advanced on a meeting that had been called to protest supposed brutalities by authorities. Dynamite bomb thrown and dozens were killed. Knights of labor were blamed for this incident, and lost public support
124358184John AtlgeldGovernor who pardoned the three anarchists who were involved in the bombing at the Haymarket Square Incident
124358185American Federation of LaborFederation of craft labor unions lead by Samuel Gompers that arose out of dissatisfaction with the Knights of Labor; made up of skilled craftsmen

APUSH Ch. 23 Review Flashcards

AP US History
American Pageant 13th Ed.
Chapter 23 Review
(Vocab + Questions)
Also used:
http://wikinotes.wikidot.com/chapter-23-13

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123642797Ulysses S. GrantRepublican candiate for the Election of 1868
123642798Horatio SeymourDemocratic candidate for the Election of 1868
123642799(Jim) Fisk and (Jay) Gouldattempted to corner the gold market by making sure no gold was being drawn out so the value of gold could rise
123642800Boss Tweedused bribes, graft, and rigged elections to mooch money and ensure continual power for himself and his buddies
123740316Tammany Halla political organization within the Democratic Party in New York city (late 1800's and early 1900's) seeking political control by corruption and bossism
123740317Thomas Nastcartoonist who relentlessly attacked Tweed's corruption
123740318Samuel TildenDemocratic nominee for president in 1876, loses narrowly; became popular by prosecuting Tweed
123740319Crédit Mobilier (scandal)a scandal that formed when a group of Union Pacific Railroad insiders formed a construction company and then hired themselves to build the railroad with inflated wages; they bribed several congressmen and the vice president to keep the scandal from going public
123740320Whiskey RingDuring the Grant administration, a group of officials who imported a specific good and used their offices to avoid paying the taxes on it, cheating the treasury out of millions of dollars
123740321William BelknapSecretary of War who resigned after pocketing bribes from suppliers to the Indian reservations; was caught swindling $24,000 by selling trinkets to the Indians
123740322Liberal Republican (Party)Party started by reformers in 1872 to "clean things up"
123740323Horace Greeleyeditor of the New York Tribune and was nominated by the Liberal Republican Party for the 1872 election
123740324Panic of 1873Four year economic depression caused by overspeculation on railroads and western lands, and worsened by Grant's poor fiscal response (refusing to coin silver)
123746694soft moneystrategy where debtors wanted paper money ("greenbacks") printed to create inflation and thus make it easier to pay off debts
123746695Resumption ActIt pledged the withdrawal of greenbacks from circulation and the redemption of all paper money in gold
123746696Greenback Labor PartyParty started in 1878 with the main mission of bringing cheap money policies to life; supported mostly by farmers
123746697Gilded Age1870s - 1890s; time period looked good on the outside, despite the corrupt politics & growing gap between the rich & poor
123746698Grand Army of the Republic (G.A.R.)military veteran group that supported Republicans
123746699StalwartsA faction of the Republican party in the ends of the 1800s Supported the political machine and patronage. Conservatives who hated civil service reform.
123746700Roscoe Conklinga politician from New York who served both as a member of the United States House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate. He was the leader of the Stalwart faction of the Republican Party
123746701Half-BreedsFavored tariff reform and social reform, major issues from the Democratic and Republican parties. They did not seem to be dedicated members of either party.
123746703Rutherford HayesRepublican candidate in election of 1876; was famous for being part of the election in which electoral votes were contested in 4 states, outcome was decided by Compromise of 1877
123746704Electoral Count Actthis act set up an electoral commission consisting of 15 people from the senate, house, and supreme court.
123746705Compromise of 1877Ended Reconstruction. Republicans promise 1) Remove military from South, 2) Appoint Democrat to cabinet (David Key postmaster general), 3) Federal money for railroad construction and levees on Mississippi river
123746706sharecroppersfarmed land they didn't own, then paid hefty fees to the landlord come harvest time
123746707Jim Crow lawsThe "separate but equal" segregation laws state and local laws enacted in the Southern and border states of the United States and enforced between 1876 and 1965
123746708Plessy vs. Fergusonstated that "separate but equal" facilities for the races were legal
123746709Chinese Exclusion Act(1882) Denied any additional Chinese laborers to enter the country while allowing students and merchants to immigrate.
123746710James GarfieldRepublican nominee in the election of 1880, ran against Winfield Scott (Democrat)
123746711Election of 1880James Garfield (Rep.) vs. Winfield Scott (Dem.) Garfield wins
123746712Chester ArthurA Stalwart who was James Garfield's runningmate
123746713James BlaineRepublican nominee for the election of 1884; he was also the leader of the Half-Breeds
123746714Grover ClevelandDemocratic nominee for the election of 1884
123746715Election of 1884James Blain (Rep.) vs. Grover Cleveland (Dem.) Clevelend wins
123746716Thomas ReedNicknamed "The Czar;" when Republicans controlled everything, he was Speaker of the House and he ran the House like a dictator; kept everybody in line
123746717McKinley TariffA highly protective tariff passed in 1880; hiked rates to roughly 48%
123748336Populist (People's) Partypolitical party formed in 1892 representing mainly farmers, favoring free coinage of silver and government control of railroads and other monopolies
123748337Farmers' AllianceA Farmers' organization founded in late 1870s; worked for lower railroad freight rates, lower interest rates, and a change in the governments tight money policy; felt inflation would make it easier to pay off their debts
123748338initiativeallowed reformers to circumvent state legislatures by submitting new legislature to the voters in general direct election
123748339referendumthe method by which actions of the legislature could be returned to the electorate for approval.
123748340Depression of 1893the first recession or depression during the industrial age
123748341Sherman Silver Purchase Actact passed in 1890 that required the government to purchase an additional 4.5 million ounces of silver bullion each month for use as currency.
123748342William Jennings Bryanthe foremost spokesman for silver and "cheap money" and a principle figure in the Populist Party
123748343Wilson-Gorman TariffMeant to be a reduction of the McKinley Tariff, it would have created a graduated income tax, which was ruled unconstitutional.
124560462Election of 1868Ulysses S. Grant (Rep.) vs Horatio Seymour (Dem.) Grant wins
124561141Election of 1876Rutherford Hayes (Rep.) vs Samuel Tilden (Dem.) Hayes wins

Biology 168 Lab Prefixes (RCCC) Flashcards

Prefix words from Lab Biology 168

Terms : Hide Images
442634340contr-against
442634341auto-self
442634342de-undoing, loss, removal
442634343dia-through, between
442634344eu-good
442634345ef-away from
442634346epi-over, above
442634347ectop-displaced
442634348endo-within
442634349dys-difficult, painful
442634350dipl-double
442634351hypno-sleep
442634352hapl-single
442634353hom(e)osame, equal
442634354extra-outside of
442634355hemi-half
442634356mes-middle
442634357macro-large
442634358infra-below, beneath
442634359iso-same, equal
442634360intra-within, inside
442634361oligo-few
442634362non-not
442634363neo-new
442634364meta-beyond, transition
442634365re-back
442634366per-through
442634367para-beside
442634368super-, supraabove, upon
442634369sub-under
442634370af-towards
442634371a-absence or lack
442634372an-absence or lack
442634373ante-before
442634374bi-two
442634375circum-around
442634376em-. en-in, inside
442634377hemo-. hemo-, hematoblood
442634378hyper-over, above
442634379exo-outside
442634380mega-large
442634381inter-between
442634382hypo-under, below
442634383ortho-straight
442634384mono-one
442634385milli-thousandth
442634386micro-small
442634387poly-many
442634388quadr-four
442634389peri-around
442634390pre-, pro-before
442634391post-after
442634392tri-three
442634393semi-half
442634394trans-across, through
442634395retro-behind, backwards
442634396anti-against
442634397co-, con-with, together

100 Most Common SAT Words Flashcards

100 Most Common SAT Words

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432370550abbreviateshorten, abridge
432370551abstinenceact of refraining from
432370552adulationhigh praise
432370553adversitymisfortune
432370554aestheticpertaining to beauty
432370555amicableagreeable
432370556anachronisticout-of-date
432370557anecdoteshort account of event
432370558anonymousnameless
432370559antagonistopponent
432370560aridextremely dry
432370561assiduoushard-working
432370562asylumsanctuary
432370563benevolentfriendly, helpful
432370564camaraderietrust among friends
432370565censureto criticize harshly
432370566circuitousindirect, roundabout
432370567clairvoyantable to see the future
432370568collaborateto work together
432370569compassionsympathy, mercy
432370570compromiseto settle differences
432370571condescendingpatronizing
432370572conditionalprovisional, contingent
432370573conformistfollower of customs
432370574congregationcrowd of people
432370575convergencejoining of parts
432370576deleteriousharmful
432370577demagoguerabble-rousing leader
432370578digressionstraying from main point
432370579diligenthard-working
432370580discreditdishonor, disgrace
432370581disdainto regard with scorn
432370582divergentvariant, moving apart
432370583empathysharing of feelings
432370584emulatefollow an example
432370585enervatingtiring, weakening
432370586enhanceimprove, augment
432370587ephemeralmomentary, fleeting
432370588evanescentshort-lived, as an image
432370589exasperationirritation, frustration
432370590exemplaryoutstanding
432370591extenuatingguilt diminishing
432370592floridflushed, ornate
432370593fortuitouslucky
432370594frugalthrifty
432370595hackneyedoverused, cliched
432370596haughtyarrogant, condescending
432370597hedonistpleasure seeker
432370598hypothesistheory requiring proof
432370599impetuousrash, impulsive
432370600imputeto attribute to someone
432370601incompatibleunable to work together
432370602inconsequentialtrivial
432370603inevitableunavoidable, certain
432370604integrityhonesty, decency
432370605intrepidfearless, adventurous
432370606intuitiveinstinctive, untaught
432370607jubilationjoy, exultation
432370608lobbyistpersuader of legislators
432370609longevitylong life
432370610mundaneordinary, common
432370611nonchalantcalm, casual
432370612novicebeginner
432370613opulentwealthy
432370614oratorspeaker
432370615ostentatiousdisplaying wealth
432370616parcheddried up
432370617perfidiousdisloyal
432370618precocioustalented beyond one's age
432370619pretentiouspompous, self-important
432370620procrastinateto delay unnecessarily
432370621prosaicrun-of-the-mill
432370622prosperitywealth, success
432370623provocativeinflammatory
432370624prudentwise, careful, cautious
432370625querulousirritable
432370626rancoroushateful
432370627reclusivewithdrawn, hermit-like
432370628reconciliationagreement after a quarrel
432370629renovationstate of being renewed
432370630resilientquick to recover
432370631restrainedcontrolled, restricted
432370632reverenceprofound respect
432370633sagacitywisdom
432370634scrutinizeto observe carefully
432370635spontaneityimpulsive action
432370636spuriousphony, false
432370637submissivemeek
432370638substantiateto verify, confirm
432370639subtleelusive, sly, ambiguous
432370640superficiallacking in depth
432370641superfluousmore than enough
432370642suppressto end an activity
432370643surreptitioussecret, stealthy
432370644tactfuldiplomatic, polite
432370645tenaciouspersistent, resolute
432370646transienttemporary, fleeting
432370647venerablerespectable due to age
432370648vindicateto clear from blame
432370649warywatchful, alert

Introduction to Paralegal Studies Flashcards

Chapters 1-6

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487896558Executive Branchthe chief executive officer of the particular government along with his or her departments and agencies who are charged with enforcing the law
487896559Legislative Branchbi-cameral bodies who draft and pass laws in the form of legislation
487896560Judicial Branchthe government's high court and inferior courts which interprets the constitution and resolves legal disputes.
487896561JudgesAn attorney who presides over courtroom proceedings and determines questions of law and in some situations questions of fact
487896562lawyersan individual who has been officially licensed to practice law in a particular jurisdiction
487896563Paralegalsan individual qualified by education, training or experience who is employed by or retained by an attorney or other entity to perform specifically delegated substantive legal work for which a lawyer is responsible
487896564Support staffindividuals who assist in the provision of legal services, including but not limited to secretaries, investigators and law clerks
487896565The first AmendmentFreedom of Speech, Freedom of the Press, Freedom to Petition the government, Freedom of Religion, Freedom of Assembly
487896566The second AmendmentThe right to bear arms
487896567The third Amendmentfreedom from quartering troops
487896568The forth AmendmentYou must have a search warrant to be allowed to search someone else's property
487896569The fifth AmendmentNo person can be tried unless indicted by a Grand Jury; no double jeopardy; no self-incrimination; no property taken without just compensation; no person deprived of life, liberty an property without due process of law.
487896570The sixth AmendmentCriminal Fair Trial Rights
487896571The seventh AmendmentRight to jury trial in civil cases
487896572The eighth AmendmentNo excessive bail or cruel and unusual punishment
487896573The thirteenth Amendmentabolished slavery
487896574The fourteenth AmendmentAn amendment that granted citzenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States and declared that no state could deprive any person of life, liberty, or property "without due process of law."
487910922LAWRules of conduct promulgated and enforced by the government,Defines conduct,Applies to individuals and entities, both public and private
487910923PromulgateTo put a law into effect by formal public announcement
487910924Jurisprudencethe study of various theories of legal philosophy.
487910925Natural Lawthe legal philosophy that believes that man made law should be based on humanity's innate sense of right and wrong
487910926Legal Positivismtheorizes that a law's validity is based on the process that gave rise to it instead of innate human principles
487925229FormalistsSubscribe to the notion that the role of a judge is to identify existing law and apply it to the present case before it. Hereunder social policy and individual views are irrelevant
487925230Legal Realistscounters the formalist position by citing the often vague and ambiguous language of the law and believes that the role of the judge is to interpret the law to justify differing outcomes
487925231Originalismalso called the strict constructionist view (Justice Scalia and Thomas) that holds that the judicial role is to apply the law in its meaning at the time it was enacted.
487925232Evolutionary Lawconsiders the law a living law prompting judges to identify the intended purpose of the law when originally passed and achieve that purpose in its modern application
487928692What are the four sources of lawStatutory, constitutional, administrative,common
487954993constitutional lawis to establish an organizational structure that allocates governmental power, and limits governmental overreaching. (separation of powers)
487954994Statutory lawthe body of laws created by legislative statutes and Comprised of Statutes and Ordinances
487954995Administrative laware the rules and regulations enacted by administrative agencies, limited to the work of that agency
487954996Common lawis the law created by the courts where other types of law are silent (ie. no evidence code in NY so the law of evidence is
487954997Doctrine of Stare Decisisproviding that a prior judicial decision on an issue is binding on future decisions based on the same facts. This was creates predictability
487997766FederalismA system of Government where power is shared between a small nationwide central government and regional governments with regional jurisdiction.
487997767Enumerated Powerspowers granted by Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution
487997768Doctrine of Implied PowersPowers not stated in the Constitution but that are necessary for Congress to carry out its enumerated powers
487997769The Interstate Commerce ClauseCongress shall have the power to regulate commerce
487997770Preemptionpower of the federal government to restrict the states from passing conflicting laws or from passing any laws in a particular area
487997771State lawStates are authorized to pass any law for the health, welfare, safety and morals of their citizens. Except: If the area is prohibited by the US Constitution If the federal government has legally preempted the area.
487997772civil lawLaw that deals with harm to an individual. Invoked when one individual or entity harms another Criminal
487997773criminal lawLaw that deals with harm to society as a whole. Invoked when an individual commits an acts that has been deemed (by the legislature) harmful to society at large
487997774PlaintiffA person who initiates a lawsuit
487997775DefendantIn a lawsuit the person who is sued; in a criminal case the person who is being charged with a crime.
487997776Substantive lawthe portion of the law that creates rights and obligations
487997777Procedural lawthe portion of the law that governs how the legal system and the courts operate
489398376Trial courtcourt of first impression where actions are initially brought (Original Jurisdiction) and where questions of fact and law are resolved
489398377Appellate courtcourt that reviews the legal determinations of lower courts (Appellate Jurisdiction) not just trial courts also lower appellate courts
489398378JurisdictionThe power of the court to hear a case
489398379Original jurisdictionrefers to a Court's power to hear a case from its inception
489398380Appellate Jurisdictionrefers to a Court's power to review the legal rulings of a lower court
489398381Jury trialwhere questions of fact are decided by the jury and questions of the law by a judge
489398382Bench trialA trial conducted without a jury
489398383Appellant or petitionerThe party in a case who has initiated an appeal
489398384Appellee or respondentThe party in a case against whom an appeal has been filed
489398385Harmless Erroran appellate ruling finding that an error committed at the trial court level is insufficient to warrant reversal
489398386Prejudicial Erroran appellate ruling finding that an error committed at the trial level warrants reversal because a substantial right of a party was abridged by the error
489398387Reversalwhen an appellate court overturns the decision of a lower court
489398388RemandWhen an appellate court sends a case back to the trial court for further action or a new trial
489398389Majority opinionan opinion in which a majority of the court joins
489398390Concurring opinionAn opinion that agrees with the majority's result but disagrees with its reasoning
489398391Dissenting opinionAn opinion that disagrees with the majority's decision and its reasoning
489467464When a party loses a case at the trial court level and believes one or more legal errors were made, they may appeal to the?Appellate Division
489467465Cases are only heard by the US Supreme Court if the Court grants a __________________, which is only granted when 4 out 9 justices vote to hear the appealwrit of certiorari
489467466Which is The highest federal appellate court?The U.S supreme court
489467467General Jurisdictioncan hear any type of case arising within its geographic location
489467468Limited jurisdictioncan only hear specified types of cases (ie. US Bankruptcy Court, US Federal Claims Court, US Tax Court)
489467469exclusive jurisdictionWhen only ONE court has the power to hear a case
489467470concurrent jurisdictionWhen MORE than one court has jurisdiction to hear a case
489467471Federal Question JurisdictionWhen a particular controversy involves either a federal statute, a federal regulation or a US Constitutional provision
489467472Diversity JurisdictionWhen a controversy is between litigants from different states and the amount is more than $75,000
489540238Intakewhere law office meets with potential client and obtains the facts necessary to determine if a cause of action exists
489540239Investigationwhere law office and its contractors speak with witnesses, gather documents and other evidence to determine if a cause of action exists
489540240Summonslegal document that provides a defendant with notice of the lawsuit, where it has been brought and by when they must appear in the action
489540241complaintdocument containing numbered paragraphs that provide defendant with allegations forming the basis for plaintiffs recovery
489540242standingA direct stake in the lawsuit being brought
489540243Personal JurisdictionThe power of a court to force a person to appear before it
489540244Subject matter JurisdictionThe power of a court to hear a particular type of case
489540245Captionheading of any court paper that shows the names of the parties, the court and the index number of the suit.
489540246Verificationan affidavit signed by the party attesting to the truth of the facts contained within the document
489540247Counter Claima claim made by the defendant against the plaintiff
489540248Cross-claima claim against another defendant to the lawsuit
489540249Compulsory counterclaimis one that if it is not brought is waived and cannot be brought in a separate action
489540250permissive counterclaimis one that can be brought but is not waived if not brought in the initial action
489540251Affirmative defensea defense to liability based on some additional facts, evidence or law) in his or her answer
489573078InterrogatoriesWritten questions sent by one party to another seeking sworn answers
489573079DepositionsPre-trial testimony given by a witness under oath.
489573080Requests or notices to admitWritten documents with statements of specific facts for adversary to either admit or deny.
489573081Document DemandWritten requests for documents or other evidence in possession and or control of another party to the lawsuit
489573082SubpoenasWritten demand for a non-party to appear for a deposition
489573083Subpoena Duces-tecumwritten demand for certain documents in the possession of a non-party to the lawsuit.
489573084- Independent medical examinationsIn any action where a plaintiff is claiming to personal injury, defendants has a right to have plaintiff examined by a doctor of its choosing within the relevant specialty.
489573085Discovery motionsMotions made during the discovery phase of the case up to the filing of the trial readiness notice.
489573086Dispositive motionsMotion to dismiss - made after all pleadings have been filed, seek to dismiss action for one or more reasons
489573087Motions in limineMade immediately before trial seeking to limit certain evidence from being introduced during the trial.

AP Human Geography: CH 1 -- Thinking Geographically) Flashcards

Ch.1 AP Human Geography :
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography

Terms : Hide Images
441855185GeographyThe study of the earth's surface, climate, continents, countries, peoples, industries, and products.
441855186EratosthenesThe head librarian at Alexandria during the third century B.C.; he was one of the first cartographers. Performed a remarkably accurate computation of the earth's circumference. He is also credited with coining the term "geography."
441855187Georoot meaning earth
441855188graphygreek root that means "to write".
441855189Human GeographyOne of the two major divisions of geography along with physical geography; the spatial analysis of human population, their cultures, activities, and landscapes.
441855190Physical GeographyOne of the two major divisions of systematic geography; the spatial analysis of the structure, processes, and location of Earth's natural phenomena such as climate, soil, plants, animals, and topography.
441855191DistributionThe arrangement of a feature in space, is made up of 3 properties : density, concentration, and pattern.
441855192DensityThe frequency with which something exists within a given unit of area(km, miles, acres etc.). One of the 3 properties of distribution along with concentration and pattern.
441855193ConcentrationThe extent of a feature's spread over space. Can be either clustered(relative) or dispersed.
441855194PatternThe geometric arrangement of objects in space. One of the three propertied of distribution.
441855195Arithmetic DensityThe total number of people divided by the total land area. An aspect of density.
441855196Physiological densityThe number of people per unit of area of arable land, which is land suitable for agriculture.
441855197Agricultural DensityThe ratio of the number of farmers to the total amount of land suitable for agriculture, a high ratio means that there is inefficient agriculture in that region.
441855198Arable landLand suitable for growing crops, is one of the fectors determining physiological density.
441855199Housing Densitynumber of dwelling units per unit of area, a high amount means that there may be overcrowding.
441855200Mapa two-dimensional, or flat, representation of Earth's surface or a portion of it
441855201Cartographyscience or art of making maps, tis awesome.
441855202Stick ChartsEarliest form of navigational or oceanographic map made of bamboo and shells, they were made by the Polynesian people among the south pacific islands. Shells represented Islands and palm strips represented patterns of waves between Islands.
441855203AnaximanderGreek philosopher and student of Thales, made an early World map based on information of sailors , however he INCORRECTLY made the map a cylinder.
441855204ThalesIntroduced geometry to the Greeks; figured out how to indirectly measure the height of a pyramid, diameter of a circle, right angles in circles. Taught Anaximander.
441855205HecateusGreek who created the FIRST Geography book around 500 B.C.E.
441855206AristotleFirst to demonstrate that the world was spherical(circular shadow on the moonduring an elipse, blah blah, blah)
441855207PtolemyRoman geographer-astronomer and author of "Guide to Geography" which included maps containing a grid system of latitude and longitude. Were not improved on for a thousand years.
441855208Guide to GeographyPtolemy's 8 volume book that codified the principles of mapmaking.
441855209Fei Xiu"The father of Chinese Cartography" also known as Phei Hsiu.
441855210Remote SensingThe acquisition of data about Earth's surface from a satellite orbiting the planet or other long-distance methods.
441855211GISGeographic Information System, A computer system that stores, organizes, analyzes, and displays geographic data(Topography, political boundaries,soil etc).
441855212GPSGlobal Positioning System., a navigational system involving satellites and computers that can determine the latitude and longitude of a receiver on Earth by computing the time difference for signals from different satellites to reach the receiver.
441855213Geradus MercatorOne of the first people to produce a world map that showed withe relative accuracy, the general outline of the continents., printed the first map that arrived the names of both the continents of N. and S. America and made map a that showed asia and N. america were separate continents
441855214Abraham OrteliusWho published 17 supplementary maps under the title Additamentrum theatri Orbis terrarum(First Atlas). Also , with Sir Frances Bacon both noted that the coastlines of certain continents seemed to fit together when placed near each other on a map
441855215Projectionmethod of transferring locations on the Earth to a flat surface distortions that result include shape, distance, direction, and relative size.
441855216Equal Area ProjectionsA map projections that shows the sizes of regions in correct relation to one another but distorts shapes,
441855217InterruptionA feature of equal area projection that separates the Eastern and Western Hemispheres into two pieces.
441855218Robinson ProjectionAn Uninterrupted Projection that attempts to balance several possible projection errors. It does not maintain completely accurate area, shape, distance, or direction, but it minimizes errors in each.
441855219Mercator ProjectionAn Uninterrupted true conformal cylindrical map projection, this projection is particularly useful for navigation because it maintains accurate direction.Famous for their distortion that makes the landmasses at the poles oversized making high latitude places look much larger than they are.
441855220LocationThe position that something occupies on earth's surface. Can be identified by 4 ways (toponym, site, situation, and mathematical location)
441855221Toponymname given to a place on earth, think place name(In this case Mt. Everest).
441855222Board of Geographical NamesOperated by the US Geological Survey, is the final decider of names on U.S Maps.
441855223U.S. Geological SurveyEstablished in (1879) A federal agency that studies landscapes and maps the land and its natural resources, looking for any possible natural hazards through the disciplines of biology, hydrology, geography, and geology. This is a non-regulatory agency of the Department of the Interior. Operates the famed "Board of Geographical Names".
441855224SiteThe physical characteristics of a place, Include climate, water sources,topography, soil,elevation, and latitude, one of 4 ways to find location.
441855225SituationThe relative location of a place in relation to the physical and cultural characteristics of the surrounding area and the connections and interdependencies within that system; a place's spatial context.
441855226MeridianAn arc drawn on a map between the North and South poles.
441855227Parellelany of the imaginary circles around the earth parallel to the equator, marking degrees of latitude
441855228longitudeThe numbering system used to indicate the location of meridians drawn on a globe and measuring distance east and west of the prime meridian (0°).
441855229Prime MeridianThe meridian, designated at 0° longitude, which passes through the Royal Observatory at Greenwich, England.
441855230latitudeThe numbering system used to indicate the location of parallels drawn on a globe and measuring distance north and south of the equator.
441855231Time ZonesOne of the 24 regions or divisions of the globe approximately coinciding with meridians at successive hours from the observatory at Greenwich, England.
441855232GMTGreenwich Mean Time. The time in that time zone encompassing the prime meridian or 0 degree longitude, also known as universal time(UT).
441855233International Date Lineis an imaginary line of longitude generally 180° (degrees) east or west of the Prime Meridian. The International Date Line is where each new day begins.
441855234Equatoran imaginary circle around the middle of the earth, halfway between the North Pole and the South Pole, largest circumference.
441855235Longitude Act of 1714Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom passed in July 1714 during the reign of Queen Anne. It established the Board of Longitude and offered a monetary reward (Longitude Prize) for anyone who could find a simple and practical method for the precise determination of a ship's longitude. Won by John Harrison.
441855236John HarrisonWorked with clocks and compasses for longitude and lattitude and created the "Marine Chronometer" which estimated one's exact longitude at sea.
441855237Regionan area of Earth distinguished by a distinctive combination of cultural and physical features. Like "the South".
441855238Regional StudiesAn approach to geography that emphasizes the relationships among social and physical phemona in a particular area study (cultural landscape)
441855239Formal Region(or uniform or homogeneous region) an area in which everyone shares in one or more distinctive characteristics(like language ,religion, climate etc.) Examples are States like Montana, corn belt. One of 3 types of regions.
441855240Functional RegionAlso called a (nodal region) Area organized around a node or focal point. The characteristic chosen to define a functional region dominates at a central focus or node and diminishes in importance outward. This region is tied to the central point by transportation or communication systems or by economic or functional associations., Example could be circulation of newspapers.
441855241Vernacular RegionCan also be called a (Perceptual Region) is a place that people believe exists as a part of their cultural identity. Such regions emerge from peoples informal sense of place rather than from scientific models developed through geographic thought. (Often identified using a mental map- which is an internal representation of a portion of Earths surface), Like "the South"
441855242CultureThe body of customary beliefs, social forms, and material traits that together constitute a group of people's distinct tradition
441855243Popular CultureCulture found in a large, heterogeneous society that shares certain habits despite differences in other personal characteristics
441855244Religionan organized system of ideas about the spiritual sphere or the supernatural, along with associated ceremonial practices by which people try to interpret and/or influence aspects of the universe otherwise beyond their control
441855245MDCMore Developed Countries, Countries with higher levels of per capita income, industrialization and modernization. they usually have lower levels of population growth. The developed region includes all of Europe, Canada, the U.S., Australia, Japan, New Zealand and the USSR
441855246LDCLess Developed Countries, A country that has low levels of average wealth, industrialization and modernization and often high levels of population growth and people employed in agriculture
441855247Cultural EcologyThe geographic study of human - environmental relationships
441855248environmental determinismA nineteenth- and early twentieth-century approach to the study of geography that argued that the general laws sought by human geographers could be found in the physical sciences. Geography was therefore the study of how the physical environment caused human activities.
441855249Carl RitterGerman geographer. Occupied the first chair in Geography at the University of Berlin until his death in 1859. Along with Humboldt, considered a founder of modern geography. Wrote 'The Science of the Earth in Relation to the Nature and the History of Mankind'. Emphasized environmental determinism.
441855250Alexander von HumboldtHe is considered one of the founders of modern geography work on botanical geography was foundational to the field of biogeography; set about the task of collecting and analyzing data about the relationships between the spatial distribution of rocks, plants, and animals.
441855251PossibilismThe modern geographic theory which rejects environmental determinism of Ritter and Humboldt, and states that the physical environment may set limits on human actions, but people have the ability to adjust to the physical environment and choose a course of action from many alternatives.
441855252Resourcesall the things used in producing goods and services
441855253PolderLand created by the Dutch by draining water from an area. Make up around 16% of the total land area of the Netherlands.
441855254DikesNetherland builds these to keep the water from getting on the land made of soil.
441855255Zuider ZeeThis is a section of the North Sea that once threatened the Netherlands with flooding. A dike completed in 1932 caused this to be converted from a saltwater sea to a freshwater lake. Some of the lake has been drained to create several polders, encompassing an area 1,600 square kilometers.
441855256Delta PlanA System of dams/dikes were built to seal off/protect Netherland's SW coast
441855257ScaleGenerally, the relationship between the portion of Earth being studied and Earth as a whole, specifically the relationship between the size of an object on a map and the size of the actual feature on Earth's surface.
441855258GlobalizationThe trend toward increased cultural and economic connectedness between people, businesses, and organizations throughout the world.
441855259Transnational CorporationA company that conducts research, operates factories, and sells products in many countries, not just where its headquarters or shareholders are located.
441855260Space-time compressionThe reduction in the time it takes to diffuse something to a distant place, as a result of improved communications and transportation systems.
441855261Distance DecayThe diminishing in importance and eventual disappearance of a phenomenon with increasing distance from its origin. Typically, the farther away one group is from another, the less likely the two groups are to interact. (Electronic devices such as the internet and e-mail have aided in eliminating barriers to interaction between people who are far from each other.
441855262Color linea barrier supported by customs and laws separating nonwhites from whites, especially with regard to their roles in the division of labor; it can be traced to the European colonization of Africa.
441855263DiffusionThe spatial spreading or dissemination of a culture element or some other phenomenon over time. Originates in the "Hearth", Two main types: Relocation and expansion.
441855264Hearththe region from which innovative ideas originate, emerges because a community invests and allocates resources to nurture the innovation. 3 major of these are North America, Western Europe, and Japan).
441855265Relocation diffusionThe spread of an idea through physical movement of people from one place to another. Such as through migration. Can explain AID'S distribution.
441855266Expansion diffusionThe spread of an innovation or an idea through a population in an area in such a way that the number of those influenced grows continuously larger(snowball effect), resulting in an expanding area of dissemination. Results in one of 3 ways: Hierarchical diffusion, contagious diffusion, and stimulus diffusion.
441855267AZTAn antiviral drug (trade name Retrovir) used in the treatment of AIDS, helps explain the rapid decline of AID'S cases in the 1990;s is an example of expansion diffusion.
441855268Snowball effectThe tendency for people to share informal information with others with whom they come into contact, helps contribute to expansion diffusion.
441855269Hierarchical diffusionThe spread of an idea from persons or nodes of authority or power to other persons or places, one of 3 aspects of expansion diffusion along with stimulus diffusion and contagious diffusion.
441855270Stimulus diffusionThe spread of an underlying principle, even though a specific characteristic is rejected.
441855271Contagious diffusionThe rapid, widespread diffusion of a feature or trend throughout a population. Facillitated by the World Wide Web and other high technologies. (Medicinal, advice etc)
441855272Uneven DevelopmentThe increasing gap in economic conditions between core(3 hearths) and peripheral regions as a result of the globalization of the economy.

Holt Geometry Vocab Chapter 1 Flashcards

mrs taylor said that all the vocab will be on her final

this set is for chapter one only

Holt Geometry

Terms : Hide Images
594982738acute angleangle that measures greater than 0º and less than 90º
594982739adjacent anglestwo angles in the same plane with a common vertex and a common side, but no common interior points
594982740anglea figure formed by two rays, or sides, with a common endpoint
594982741angle bisectora ray that divides an angle into two congruent angles
594982742areathe number of non-overlapping square units of a given size that exactly cover the figure
594982743baseany side of a triangle
594982744betweenwhat is B, if AB+BC=AC ( I don't know how to write that but it is on page 14)
594982745bisectto divide
594982746circumferencethe distance around the circle
594982747collinearpoints that lie on the same line
594982748complementary anglestwo angles whose measure have a sum of 90º
594982749congruent anglesangels that have the same measure
594982750congruent segmentssegments that have the same length
594982751constructiona way of creating a figure that is more precise
594982752coordinate planea plane that is divided into four regions by a horizontal line (x-axis) and a vertical line (y-axis)
594982753coplanarpoints that lie on the same plane
594982754degreethere are 360º in a circle, so one _______ is 1/360 of a circle
594982755diametera segment that passes through the center of the circle and whose endpoints are on the circle
594982756distancethe absolute value of the difference of the coordinates
594982757endpointa point at one end of a segment or the starting point of a ray
594982758exterior of an anglethe set of all points outside the angle
594982759heighta segment from a vertex that forms a right angle with a line containing the base
594982760hypotenusethe side across from the right angle that stretches from one leg to the other ( in a right triangle
594982761imagethe resulting figure in a transformation
594982762interior of an anglethe set of all points between the sides of the angle
594982763legthe two sides that form the right angle (in a right triangle)
594982764lengththe distance between a and b
594982765linean undefined term in geometry, that is a straight path that has no thickness and extends forever
594982766linear paira pair of adjacent angles whose non-common sides are opposite rays
594982767measuredangles are ___________ in degrees
594982768midpointthe point that bisect the segment into two congruent segments
594982769obtuse angleangle that measures greater than 90º and less than 180º
594982770opposite raystwo rays that have a common endpoint and form a line
594982771perimeterthe sum of the side lengths of the figure
594982772planean undefined term in geometry, it is a flat surface that has no thickness and extends forever
594982773pointundefined term in geometry, has a location but no size
594982774postulatea statement that is accepted as true without proof
594982775preimagethe original figure in a transformation
594982776radiusa segment whose endpoints are the center of the circle and a point on the circle
594982777raya part of a line that starts at an endpoint and extends forever in one direction
594982778reflectiona transformation across a line, flip
594982779right angleangle that measures 90º
594982780rotationa transformation about a certain point, turn
594982781segmentthe part of the line consisting of two points and all points between them
594982782segment bisectorand ray, segment, or line that intersects a segment at its midpoint
594982783straight angleformed by two opposite rays and measures 180º
594982784supplementary anglestwo angles whose measures have a sum of 180º
594982785transformationa change in the position, shape, or size of a figure
594982786translationa transformation in which all the points of a figure move the same distance in the same direction, slide
594982787undefined termbasic figures in geometry that cannot be defined by using other figures: points, planes, and lines
594982788vertexthe common endpoint of an angle
594982789vertical anglestwo nonadjacent angles formed by two intersecting lines
594982790coordinatethe number that a point corresponds to
594982791L+L+W+W ( or for triangle a+b+c)the formula for perimeter
594982792L × Wthe formula for area ( square and rectangle)
594982793BH ÷ 2the formula for area (triangle)
5949827942(pi)rthe formula for circumference
594982795(pi) r²the formula for area ( circle)

Pathophysiology Reference Values Flashcards

Normal reference laboratory values in pathophysiology

Terms : Hide Images
595194090Glucose3.9-6.1 mmol/liter
595194091Proteins60-80 g/liter
595194092Albumin31-43 g/liter
595194093Lipids6-9 g/liter
595194094Cholesterol< 5.17 mmol/liter
595194095LDL-cholesterol< 3.36 mmol/liter
595194096HDL-cholesterol> 1.03 mmol/liter
595194097Free fatty acids0.17-0.95 mmol/liter
595194098Triglycerides0.45-1.69 mmol/liter
595194099Sodium135-145 mmol/liter
595194100Potassium3.5-5.0 mmol/liter
595194101Chloride100-108 mmol/liter
595194102Bicarbonate22-26 mmol/liter
595194103Total calcium2.1-2.6 mmol/liter
595194104ionic calcium1.12-1.2 mmol/liter
595194105Magnesium0.7-1.0 mmol/liter
595194106Phophorus0.84-1.45 mmol/liter
595194107Osmolality280-296 mOsm/kg
595194108Alkaline phosphatase< 129 U/liter
595194109Alanine aminotransferase (ALT)< 40 U/liter
595194110Aspartate aminotransferase (AST)< 37 U/liter
595194111Gamma glutamyltransferase (GGT)< 50 U/liter
595194112Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)< 480 U/liter
595194113Amylase< 100 U/liter
595194114Lipase< 60 U/liter
595194115Uric acid137-130 µmol/liter
595194116Creatinine53-133 µmol/liter
595194117Urea nitrogen (BUN)2.9-8.9 mmol/liter
595194118Total bilirubin0-17.0 µmol/l
595194119Direct bilirubin0-7 µmol/liter
595194120pH7.35-7.45
595194121Arterial PaCO24.7-6.0 kPa (35-45 mmHg)
595194122Aterial PaO210.6-13.3 kPa (80-100 mmHg)
595194123Arterial oxygen saturation0.95-0.98 (95-98%)
595194124Buffer base43-48 mmol/liter
595194125Base excess0±5 mmol/liter
595194126Anion gap8-16 mmol/liter
595194127Urine pH5.0-9.0
595194128Specific gravity (urine)1.001-1.035 pond/cm3
595194129Creatinine clearance2.0±0.4 ml/s/1.73 m2
595194130Urine osmolality50-1400 mOsm/kg
595194131RBC count4.1-5.3x10^12/liter
595194132Reticulocyte count0.005-0.015 (5-15 reticulocytes in 1000 RBC)
595194133Hematocrite0.36-0.49 (36-49%)
595194134Hemoglobin7.4-11.2 mmol/liter (12-18 g/deciliter)
595194135Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)5-15 mm/hour
595194136Mean corpuscular value (MCV)78-102 fl
595194137Cell mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH)25-35 pg/cell
595194138Mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC)310-370 g/liter
595194139Iron5.4-28.7 µmol/liter
595194140Iron-binding capacity40.8-76.7 µmol/liter
595194141Ferritin10-300 µg/liter
595194142WBC count4.5-11 x10^9/liter
595194143Platelet count150-350 x10^9/liter
595194144Partial thromboplastin time22.1-34.1 sec
595194145Prothrombin time11.2-13.2 sec
595194146International normalized ratio (INR)<2

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