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AP Test Review Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
6710989520Intermediate Value TheoremIf f(x) is continuous, there must be at least one "c" on (a,b) such that f(c) is between f(a) and f(b).0
6711001789Extreme Value TheoremIf f(x) is continuous on [a,b] then there exists an absolute maximum and minimum on [a,b] either at critical points or endpoints.1
6711009873Mean Value TheoremIf f(x) is differentiable then there is at least one "c" on (a,b) such that f'(c)= (f(b) - f(a))/(b-a)2
6711099251Average Value of f(x) on [a,b]1/(b-a) times the Definite Integral of f(x) from a to b3
6711103633Average Rate of change of f(x) from a to b(f(b) - f(a))/(b-a)4
6711108786Particle moves leftVelocity is negative5
6711110370Object is at restVelocity is zero6
6711111279Object is speeding upvelocity and acceleration have the same sign7
6711115552DisplacementDefinite integral of velocity = s(b) - s(a)8
6711119045Total DistanceDefinite integral of the absolute value of velocity9
6711121334d/dx[c]010
6711121882d/dx[x]111
6711122965d/dx[x^n]nx^(n-1)12
6711125073d/dx[sinx]cosx13
6711125782d/dx[cosx]-sinx14
6711127665d/dx[tanx]sec^2(x)15
6711130608d/dx[secx]secxtanx16
6711132069d/dx[e^u]u' e^u17
6711133078d/dx[lnu]u'/u18
6711136149d/dx[f(x)+g(x)]f'(x) + g'(x)19
6711137765d/dx[f(x)g(x)]f(x)g'(x) + g(x)f'(x)20
6711139446d/dx[f(x)/g(x)][g(x)f'(x) - f(x)g'(x)]/[g(x)]^221
6711142640d/dx[cf(x)]cf'(x)22
6711146863Definition of the derivative of f(x)lim as h approaches zero of [f(x+h)-f(x)]/h23
6711157328d/dx[f(g(x))]f'(g(x))g'(x)24
6711159755d/dx[f(g(h(x)))]f'(g(h(x))g'(h(x))h'(x)25
6711167127g'(x) if f(x) and g(x) are inverses1/(f'(g(x))26
6711174606f(x) is increasingf'(x) is positive27
6711175063f(x) is decreasingf'(x) is negative28
6711176047f(x) is concave upf''(x) is positive29
6711176778f(x) is concave downf''(x) is negative30
6711180473f(x) has a point of inflection at x=af''(a) = 0 or is undefined and there is a sign change of f''(a) at x=a31
6711184030f(x) has a relative (local) minimum at x=af'(a)=0 or is undefined. Also f'(x) changes from negative to positive at x=a32
6711186578f(x) has a relative (local) maximum at x=af'(a)=0 or is undefined. Also f'(x) changes from positive to negative at x=a33
6711194029L'Hopital RuleIf the limit as x approaches h of f(x)/g(x) is an indeterminant form then it also equals the limit as x approaches h of f'(x)/g'(x)34

AP World History Period 1 Flashcards

From Hunting and Gathering to Civilizations, 2.5 million-1000 B.C.E.: Origins
Original from MrsBHatchTEACHER

Terms : Hide Images
12070379392hunting and gatheringMeans of obtaining subsistence (staying alive) by humans before the mastery of sedentary (staying in one spot) agriculture; normally a tribal social organization0
12070379393civilizationSocieties with reliance on sedentary (in one place) agriculture, ability to produce food surpluses (extra food!), and existence of non-farming elites, along with merchant (sales) and groups that manufacturing (make stuff)1
12070379394neolithicThe New Stone Age between 8000 and 5000 B.C.E.; period in which agriculture was invented; domestication (control by humans) of plants and animals accomplished2
12070379395nomadic societiesGroups of people who continually move from one location to another in order for their animals to graze and to find additional sources of food3
12070379396cultureCombination of ideas, art, "norms", and patterns of behavior that result from human social interaction4
12070379397agrarian revolutionOccurred between 8000 and 5000 B.C.E.; transition from hunting and gathering to sedentary (settled) farming5
12070379398pastoralismA nomadic agricultural lifestyle based on herding domesticated animals; often created independent tribes capable of challenging sedentary agricultural societies6
12070379399Catal HuyukEarly urban culture/civiization based on sedentary agriculture; located in modern southern Turkey; larger in population than Jericho, had greater degree of social stratification (hierarchy)7
12070379400Bronze AgeFrom 4000 to 3000 B.C.E.; increased use of plow, metalworking; development of wheeled vehicles, writing develops8
12070379401MesopotamiaLiterally "between the rivers"; the civilization that arose in the alluvial plain of the Tigris-Euphrates river valleys9
12070379402potter's wheelA technological advance in pottery making; invented circa 6000 B.C.E.; improves food/material storage and transport10
12070379403SumeriansPeople who migrated into Mesopotamia circa 4000 B.C.E.; created the first civilization within the region; organized area into city-states11
12070379404cuneiformA form of writing developed by the Sumerians using a wedge-shaped stylus and clay tablets12
12070379405city-stateA form of political organization typical of Mesopotamian civilization; consisted of a city that controlled surrounding farmland13
12070379406ziggurata massive building usually associated with Mesopotamian temples14
12070379407Babylonian EmpireUnified all of Mesopotamia circa 1800 B.C.E.; collapsed due to foreign invasion circa 1600 B.C.E.15
12070379408HammurabiThe most important Babylonian ruler; responsible for codification (making it official) of the law16
12070379409PharaohThe term used to denote the kings of ancient Egypt;17
12070379410pyramidsMonumental architecture typical of Old Kingdom Egypt; used as burial sites for pharaohs18
12070379411hieroglyphsForm of writing developed in ancient Egypt; more pictorial than Mesopotamian cuneiform19
12070379412KushAfrican state that developed along the upper reaches of the Nile circa 1000 B.C.E.; conquered Egypt and ruled it for several centuries20
12070379413monotheismThe exclusive worship of one god; introduced by Jews into Middle Eastern civilization21
12070379414PhoeniciansSeafaring civilization located on the shores of the eastern Mediterranean; established colonies throughout the Mediterranean22
12070379415Harappa and Mohenjo DaroMajor urban complexes of Harappan civilization; laid out on planned grid pattern23
12070379416AryansIndo-European nomadic, warlike, pastorialists who replaced Harappan civilization24
12070379417Huanghe (Yellow) River BasinSite of the development of sedentary (settled) agriculture in China25
12070379418Shang1st Chinese dynasty (after the legendary Xia)26
12070379419OraclesShamans or priests in Chinese society who foretold the future through interpreting animal bones cracked by heat; inscriptions on bones led to Chinese writing27
12070379420ideographic writingPictograph characters grouped together to create new concepts; typical of Chinese writing28
12070379421Big GeographyA term that draws attention to the global nature of world history.29
12070379422PaleolithicThe period that ended about 3,000 years after the end of the last Ice Age, it lasted until about 10,000 years ago. (Old Stone Age) The period of the Stone Age associated with the evolution of humans. It predates (before) the Neolithic period.30
12070379423Human migration during Paleolithic eramovement of humans from Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and the Americas31
12070379424egalitarianequality among people (no social levels)32
12070379425Neolithic Revolutionperiod of change from hunter-gatherer lifestyle to agricultural lifestyles associated with domestication of animals, farming, and settlement33
12070379426patriarchyfather based/male dominated society (controlled by men)34
12070379427climatic changePermanent agricultural villages emerged first in the lands of the eastern Mediterranean, possibly as a response to what?35
12070379428weaponsPastoralists were often the developers and disseminators of of ____ and forms of transportation that transformed warfare in agrarian civilizations36
12070379429horsesmajor mode of transportation used and developed by pastoralists37
12070379430artThis cultural phenomenon was usually promoted (encouraged) by the wealthiest and most powerful members of society (kings, priests, etc.)38
12070379431record-keeping systemsthese political and economic strategies arose independently in all early civilization and subsequently diffused through trade and migration39
12070379433Nile RiverThis river flooded regularly which became extremely important for agriculture in the early Egyptian civilizations.40
12070379434Tigris RiverThis river's floods were unpredictable and impacted the development of the Mesopotamian civilization.41
12070379435MesopotamianUnpredictable weather patterns affected the development of the _____ civilization.42
12070379436Nubia and KushKingdoms upriver from Egypt.43
12070379439Standard of Ur44
12070379440Harappan King or Priest Figure45
12070379437JerichoOne of the earliest cities: located in modern Israel.46
12070379438Catal-HyoukOne of the earliest cities: located in modern Turkey.47

AP Language Rhetorical Devices Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
11774294259AestheticPertaining to the value of art for its own sake or for form0
11774303802Allegory1
11774315589AlliterationThe recurrence of initial consonant sounds (in poetry)2
11774324685AllusionA reference to a historical or literary figure, event or object.3
11774332410AnalogyComparison of two things that are alike in some respects4
11774341506AnaphoraRepetition of a word or phrase in successive phrases5
11774357029AnecdoteA brief story told by a character in a piece of literature6
11774365616AntagonistThe character who opposes the protagonist7
11774372375Antiheroprotagonist who does not exemplify typical traits of hero8
11774380841Antithesisa contrast or opposition of ideas9
11774389116Aphorisma concise statement designed to make a point or illustrate a commonly held belief10
11774398056Apostrophea person thing or quality is addressed11
11774405250AppositiveA noun or phrase next to another noun for descriptive purposes "Mary, queen of the land, hosted the ball."12
11774414753AssonanceThe repetition of identical vowel sounds13
11774422090AsyndetonThe absence of conjunctions "He was brave, fearless, afraid of nothing."14
11774431197BildungsromanA novel or story whose theme is the moral or psychological growth of the main character15
11774435522CanonThe works of an author accepted as authentic16
11774447640CatharsisCleansing of the spirit through pity and terror (in tragedy )17
11774457589Chiasmusfigure of speech in which the order of the terms in the first of parallel clauses is reversed in the second. "Has the Church failed mankind, or has mankind failed the Church? " - TS Eliot18
11774469414ColloquialOrdinary language - vernacular19
11774478797ConnotationWhat is implied by the words20
11774487853ContradictionA direct opposition between things compared21
11774497968Deductivea reasoning process - a conclusion is drawn from set of premises22
11774508245Delayed sentenceThe main idea is at the end. "Just as he bent to tie his shoe, a car hit him."23
11774516591DenotationThe direct and specific meaning24
11774525848Deus ex machinaa person or thing (as in fiction or drama) that appears or is introduced suddenly and unexpectedly and provides a contrived solution to an apparently insoluble difficulty.25
11774537768Dictionword choice26
11774547053Didacticlanguage intended to teach,27
11774560716Doppelgangerghostly counterpart of living person28
11774569439Elegypoem or prose or song lamenting the death of a person29
12025482292EpiphanyA sudden insight or perception usually brought on by a simple experience30
12025493296EpistolaryA piece of literature contained in or carried on by letters31
12025502062EpitaphA piece of writing in praise of a dead person32
12025511581Epithetan adjective or descriptive phrase expressing a quality characteristic of the person or thing mentioned.33
12025522723EthosThe speaker is perceived as credible34
12025550657Eulogyspeech or writing in praise of a person or thing (dead)35
12025560847Euphemismuse "nice" language for something blunt. "Passed away" for "dead"36
12025573288Expletivesingle word or phrase - usually set off by commas37
12025590408Foila character who contrasts with another character - usually the protagonist— to highlight particular qualities of the other character.38
12025603994Formal languageLanguage that is lofty, dignified, impersonal39
12025629237Genreliterary form (tragedy, comedy, novel, essay)40
12025634546Hyperboleexaggeration41
12025651487Imagerysensory details (appealing to one of the five senses)42
12025665990In media resOpening a story in the middle of the action43
12025675956Inductiveconclusion from part of class applied to whole class44
12025686509Invectiveangry and insulting language45
12025696198IronyA situation or statement where what is expected is different from what actually happens or is meant.46
12025705770Juxtapositiontwo things placed side by side to show contrast - so the differences are emphasized47
12025716556LitotesForm of understatement using the negative. "She is not a bad cook."48
12025729502MetaphorComparing two things by stating one is the other. "The eyes are the windows of the soul." "Time is money."49
12025746499Metonymya figure of speech that replaces the name of a thing with the name of something else with which it is closely associated. "The knights are loyal to the crown"50
12025761255OnomatopoeiaA word that sounds like what it describes,"buzz" "hiss"51
12025773452OxymoronA figure of speech that combines two opposite elements, "jumbo shrimp" or "deafening silence"52
12025786160ParallelismRecurrent syntactical similarity53
12025798039ParadoxA statement that seems contradictory - but is true. "What a pity that youth must be wasted on the young." - George Bernard Shaw.54
12025825709ParodyA satirical imitation of a work of art for purpose of ridiculing its style or subject55
12025836074PerspectiveA character's view of the events or situation in a story56
12025850864Point of viewthe position from which something or someone is observed.57
12025891936PropagandaInformation purposely spread in order to help or harm a person, group or institution58
12025902625ProseThe ordinary form of written language (not poetry or verse).59
12025914921ProtagonistThe chief character in a work of literature60
12025984884SarcasmA sharp caustic remark. "Nice catch"61
12026004615SatireA literary style used to make fun of or ridicule an idea or human vice or weakness62
12026017689SimileA comparison using "like" or "as"63
12026023451SyllogismA form of deduction64
12026102188Synecdochea figure of speech in which a word or phrase that refers to a part of something is substituted to stand in for the whole, or vice versa. For example, the phrase "all hands on deck" is a demand for all of the crew to help, yet the word "hands"—just a part of the crew—stands in for the whole crew.65
12026113990SyntaxThe way words are put together to form phrases, clauses and sentences.66
12026126128ThemeMain idea67
12026138134ThesisFocus statement of essay68
12026180790ToneThe attitude a literary work takes towards its subject and theme.69
12026191601UnderstatementMakes an idea less important than it really is - "The hurricane disrupted traffic."70
12026202401UtopiaAn imaginary place of ideal perfection.71
12026212615VoiceThe speaker. A "person" telling the story or poem72
12026224935Zeugmacan be used to create drama, add emotion, or produce a level of shock value. While there can still be an underlying sense of confusion, generally, a zeugma is used purposely.73

AP World History Odd Chapters 1-11 Terms Flashcards

The terms and definitions for the vocabulary terms in Ways of the World: Chapter 1.

Terms : Hide Images
9987130458Venus FigurinesPaleolithic carvings of the female form, often with exaggerated breasts, buttocks, hips and stomachs, which may have had religious significance.0
9987130459trance danceIn San culture, a nightlong ritual held to activate a person's inner spiritual potency (n/um) to counteract the evil influences of gods and ancestors. This practice was apparently common to the Khoisan people, of who the Ju/'Hoansi are a surviving remnant.1
9987130460shamanIn many early societies, a person believed to have the ability to act as a bridge between living humans and supernatural forces, often by means of trances induced by psychoactive drugs.2
9987130461San, or Ju/'hoansiA Paleolithic people living on the northern edge of the Kalahari desert in southern Africa.3
9987130462Paleolithic "settling down"The process by which some Paleolithic people moved towards permanent settlement in the wake of the last Ice Age. Settlement was marked by increasing storage of food and accumulation of goods as well as growing inequalities in society.4
9987130463Paleolithic rock artAlthough this term can refer to the art of any gathering and hunting society, it is typically used to describe the hundreds of Paleolithic paintings discovered in Spain and France and dating at about 20,000 years ago; these paintings usually depict a range of animals, although human figures and abstract designs are also found.5
9987130464PaleolithicLiterally "old stone age", the term used to describe early Homo sapiens societies in the period before the development of agriculture.6
9987130465"the original affluent society"Term coined by the scholar Marshall Sahlins in 1972 to describe Paleolithic societies, which he registered as affluent not because they had so much but because they wanted or needed so little.7
9987130466n/umAmong the San, a spiritual potency that becomes activated during "curing dances" and protects humans from the malevolent forces of gods or ancestral spirits.8
9987130467NeanderthalsHomo sapiens neanderthalensis, a European variant of the Homo sapiens that died out about 25,000 years ago.9
9987130468megafaunal extinctionDying-out of a number of large animal species, including the mammoth and several species of hoses and camels, that occurred around 11,000-10,000 years ago, at the end of the Ice Age. The extinction may have been caused by the excessive hunting or by the changing climate of the era.10
9987130469Jomon cultureA settled Paleolithic culture of prehistoric Japan, characterized by seaside villages and the creation of some of the world's earliest pottery.11
9987130470insulting the meatA San cultural practice meant to deflate pride that involved negative comments about the meat brought in by a hunter and the expectation that a successful hunter would disparage his own kill.12
9987130471Ice AgeAny of a number of cold periods in history; the last Ice Age was at its peak around 20,000 years ago.13
9987130472"human revolution"The term used to describe the transition of humans from acting out of biological imperative to dependence on learned or invented ways of living (culture).14
9987130473HadzaA people of northern Tanzania, almost the last surviving Paleolithic society.15
9987130474Great GoddessAccording to one theory, a dominant deity of the Paleolithic Era.16
9987130475"gathering and hunting peoples"As the name suggests, people who live by collecting food rather than producing it. Recent scholars have turned this term instead of the older "hunter-gatherer" in recognition that such societies depend much more heavily on gathering than hunting for survival.17
9987130476Flores manA recently discovered hominid species of Indonesia.18
9987130477DreamtimeA complex worldview of Australia's Aboriginal people that held that current humans live in a vibration or echo of ancestral happenings.19
9987130478Clovis CultureThe earliest widespread and distinctive culture of North America; named from the Clovis point, a particular kind of projectile point.20
9987130479Chumash CulturePaleolithic culture of southern California that survived until the modern era.21
9987130480Brotherhood of the TomolA prestigious craft guild that monopolized the building and ownership of large oceangoing canoes, or tomols, among the Chumash people (located in what is now southern California)22
9987130481Austronesian migrationsThe last phase of the great human migraton that established a human presence in every habitable region of the earth. Austronesian-speaking people settled in the Pacific Islands and Madagascar in a series of seaborne migrations that began around 3,500 years ago.23
9987130482Yellow Turban RebellionA major Chinese peasant revolt that began in 184 C.E. and helped cause the fall of the Han dynasty.24
9987130483XiongnuNomadic peoples to the north of the Great Wall of China who were a frequent threat to the stability of the Chinese state25
9987130484WudiHan emperor who began the Chinese civil service by establishing an academy to train imperial bureaucrats.26
9987130485SolonAthenian statesman and lawmaker whose reforms led the Athenians towards democracy27
9987130486Qin ShihuangdiLiterally "first emperor from the Qin" Shihuangdi forcibly reunited China and established a strong and repressive state.28
9987130487Qin dynastyA short-lived but highly influential Chinese dynasty that succeeded in reuniting China at the end of the Warring States period.29
9987130488Punic WarsThree major wars between Rome and Carthage in North Africa, fought between 264 and 146 B.C.E., that culminated in Roman victory and control of the western Mediterranean.30
9987130489PlebeiansPoorer, less privileged Romans who gradually won a role in Roman politics.31
9987130490Persian EmpireA major empire that expanded from the Iranian plateau to incorporate the Middle East from Egypt to India ; flourished from about 550 - 330 B.C.E.32
9987130491PersepolisThe capital and greatest palace-city of the Persian Empire. Destroyed by Alexander the Great.33
9987130492Peloponnesian WarGreat war between Athens and Sparta (w/their allies), lasting from 431 to 404 B.C.E. The conflict ended with the defeat of Athens and the closing of Athens' Golden Age.34
9987130493pax RomanaThe "Roman Peace," a term typically used to denote the stability and prosperity of the early Roman Empire, especially in the first and second centuries C.E.35
9987130494PatriciansWealthy, privileged Romans who dominated early Roman society.36
9987130495Olympic GamesGreek religious festival and athletic competition in honor of Zeus ; found in 776 B.C.E. and celebrated every four years.37
9987130496Mauryan EmpireA major empire that encompassed most of India.38
9987130497Marathon (Battle of Marathon)Athenian victory over a Persian invasion in 490 B.C.E.39
9987130498Mandate of HeavenThe ideological underpinning of Chinese emperors, this was a belief that a ruler held authority by command of a divine force as long as he ruled morally and benevolently.40
9987130499IoniaThe territory of Greek settlements on the coast of Anatolia ; the main bone of contention between the Greeks and the Persian Empire.41
9987130500HopliteA heavily armed Greek infantryman. Over time, the ability to afford a hoplite panoply and to fight for the city came to define Greek citizenship.42
9987130501HerodotusGreek historian known as the "father of history." His Histories enunciated the Greek view of a fundamental divide between East and West, culminating in the Greco-Persian Wars of 490~480 B.C.E.43
9987130502Hellenistic EraThe period from 323-30 B.C.E. in which Greek culture spread widely in Eurasia in the kingdoms ruled by Alexander's political successors.44
9987130503Han dynastyDynasty that ruled China from 206 B.C.E. to 220 C.E., creating a durable state based on Shihuangdi's state-building achievement.45
9987130504Gupta EmpireAn empire of India (320~550 C.E.).46
9987130505Greco-Persian WarsTwo major Persian invasions of Greece, in 490 and 480 B.C.E., in which the Persians were defeated at both land and sea each time.47
9987130506Darius IGreat king of Persia after the upheavals after Cyprus's death ; completed the establishment of the Persian Empire.48
9987130507Cyrus (the Great)Founder of the Persian Empire ; a ruler noted for his conquests, religious tolerance, and political moderation.49
9987130508Caesar AugustusThe great-nephew and adopted son of Julius Caesar who emerged as sole ruler of the Roman state at the end of an extended period of civil war.50
9987130509Athenian democracyA radical form of direct democracy in which much of the free male population of Athens had the franchise and officeholders were chosen by lot.51
9987130510AshokaThe most famous ruler of the Mauryan Empire ; he converted to Buddhism and tried to rule peacefully and with tolerance.52
9987130511AryansIndo-European pastoralists who moved into India about the time of the collapse of the Indus Valley civilization ; their role in causing this collapse is still debated by historians.53
9987130512Alexander the GreatAlexander III of Macedon, conqueror of the Persian Empire and part of northwestern India.54
9987130513Ahura MazdaIn Zoroastrianism, the good god who rules the world.55
9987130536Yellow Turban RebellionA massive Chinese peasant uprising inspired by Daoist teachings that began in 184 CE with the goal of establishing a new golden age of equality and harmony.56
9987130537WudiThe Chinese emperor (r. 141-87 BCE) who started the Chinese civil service system with the establishment in 124 BCE of an imperial academy for future officials.57
9987130538Wu, EmpressThe only female "emperor" in Chinese history (r. 690-705 CE), Empress Wu patronized scholarship, worked to elevate the position of women, and provoked a backlash of Confucian misogynist invective.58
9987130539Wang MangA Han court official who usurped the throne and ruled from 8 CE to 23 CE; noted for his reform movement that included the breakup of large estates.59
9987130540VaisyaThe Indian social class that was originally defined as farmers but eventually comprised merchants.60
9987130541untouchablesAn Indian social class that emerged below the Sudras and whose members performed the most unclean and polluting work.61
9987130542the "three obediences"In Chinese Confucian thought, the notion that a woman is permanently subordinate to male control: first that of her father, then of her husband, and finally of her son.62
9987130543SudraThe lowest Indian social class (caste system) of varna; regarded as servants of their social betters. The Sudra varna eventually included peasant farmers.63
9987130544SpartacusA Roman gladiator who led the most serious slave revolt in Roman history from 73 to 71 BCE.64
9987130545scholar-gentry classA term used to describe members of China's landowning families, reflecting both the wealth generated from their land and the power and prestige that they derived as government officials.65
9987130546"ritual purity" in Indian social practiceIn India, the idea that members of higher castes must adhere to strict regulations limiting or forbidding their contact with objects and members of lower castes to preserve their own caste standing and their relationship with the gods.66
9987130547PericlesA prominent and influential statesman of Ancient Athens (ca. 495-429 BCE); presided over Athen's Golden Age.67
9987130548latifundiaHuge estates operated by slave labour that flourished in parts of the Roman Empire.68
9987130549KshatriyaThe Indian social class of warriors and rulers.69
9987130550karmaIn Indian belief, the force generated by one's behaviour in a previous life that decides the level at which an individual will be reborn.70
9987130551helotsThe dependent, semi-enslaved class of ancient Sparta whose social discontent prompted the militarization of Spartan society.71
9987130552Greek and Roman slaveryIn the Greek and Roman world, slaves were captives from war and piracy (and their descendants), abandoned children, and the victims of long-distance trade; manumission was common. Among the Greeks, household service was the most common form of slavery, but in parts of the Roman state, thousands of slaves were employed under brutal conditions in the mines and on great plantations.72
9987130553dharmaIn Indian belief, performance of the duties appropriate to an individual's caste; faithful performance will lead to rebirth in a higher caste.73
9987130554caste as varna and jatiThe system of social organisation in India that has evolved over millennia; it is based on an original division of the populace into four inherited classes (varna), with the addition of thousands of social distinctions based on occupation (jatis), which became the main cell of social life in India.74
9987130555BrahminsThe Indian social class of priests.75
9987130556Ban ZhaoA Chinese woman writer and court official (45-116 C.E.) whose work provides valuable insight on the position of women in classical China.76
9987130557AspasiaA foreign woman resident in Athens (ca. 470-400 BCE) and partner of the statesman Pericles who was famed for her learning and wit.77
9987130558American WebA term used to describe the network of trade that linked parts of the pre-Columbian Americas; although less intense and complete than the Afro-Eurasian trade networks, this web nonetheless provided a means of exchange for luxury goods and ideas over large areas.78
9987130559Black DeathThe name given to the massive epidemic that swept Eurasia in the 14th century C.E.; it may have been bubonic plague, anthrax, or a collection of epidemic diseases.79
9987130560BorobudurThe largest Buddhist monument anywhere in the world, _______ is a mountainous ten-level monument with an elaborate carving program, probably built in the ninth century C.E. by the Sailendra rulers of central Java; it is an outstanding example of cultural exchange and syncretism.80
9987130561Bubonic PlagueA highly fatal disease transmitted by fleas; it devastated the Mediterranean world between 534 and 750 C.E. and again in the period 1346-1350 C.E.81
9987130562Ghana, Mali, SonghayA series of important states that developed in western and central Sudan in the period 50-1600 C.E. in response to the economic opportunities of trans-Saharan trade (especially control of gold production).82
9987130563Great ZimbabweA powerful state in the African interior that apparently emerged from trade of gold to the East African coast; flourished between 1250 and 1350 C.E.83
9987130564Ibn BattutaA famous Arab scholar, merchant, and public official who visited much of the Islamic world in the fourteenth century and wrote a major account of what he saw.84
9987130565Indian Ocean Trading NetworkThe world's largest sea-based system of communication and exchange before 1500 C.E., ____________ commerce stretched from southern China to eastern Africa and included not only the exchange of luxury and bulk goods but also the exchange of ideas and crops.85
9987130566Jie PeopleA nomadic people who controlled much of northern China in the third and fourth centuries; many converted to Buddhism.86
9987130567MalaysiansSpeakers of Austronesian languages from what is now Indonesia who became major traders in Southeast Asia and Madagascar.87
9987130568MonsoonsAlternating wind currents that blew eastward across the Indian Ocean in the summer and westward in the winter, facilitating trade.88
9987130569Oasis Cities of Central AsiaCities such as Merv, Samarkand, Khotan, and Dunhuang that became centers of trans-Eurasian trade.89
9987130570PochtecaProfessional merchants among the Aztecs.90
9987130571SailendraA kingdom of central Java that flourished from the eighth century to the tenth century C.E., noted for being deeply influenced by Indian culture.91
9987130572Sand RoadsA term used to describe the routes of the trans-Saharan trade in Africa.92
9987130573Silk RoadsLand-based trade routes that linked the distant peoples of Eurasia.93
9987130574SrivijayaA Malay kingdom that dominated the Straits of Malacca between 670 and 1025 C.E., noted for its creation of a native/Indian hybrid culture.94
9987130575SudanFrom the Arabic term for "the land of black people," a large region of West Africa that became part of a major exchange circuit.95
9987130576Swahili CivilizationAn East African civilization that emerged in the eighth century C.E. from a blending of Bantu, Islamic, and other Indian Ocean trade elements.96
9987130577Third-Wave CivilizationsCivilizations that emerged between 500 and 1500 C.E. and were typified by intensifying trade networks.97
9987130578Trans-Saharan Slave TradeA fairly small-scale trade that developed in the twelfth century C.E., with West African slaves captured in raids being exported across the Sahara for sale mostly as household servants in Islamic North Africa; the difficulty of travel across the desert limited the scope of this trade.98
9987130579VeniceAn Italian city that by 1000 C.E. emerged as a major center of Mediterranean trade.99
9987130580Abbasid Caliphate (pron. ah-BASS-id)Dynasty of caliphs who ruled an increasingly fragmented Islamic state from 750 to 1258 eventually becoming a little more than figureheads.100
9987130581al-Andalus (pron. al-AND-a-loos)Arabic name for Spain (literally, the "land of the Vandals"), most of which was conquered by Arab and Berber forces in the early eighth century C.E.101
9987130582AnatoliaAncient name for Asia Minor, part of the Byzantine Empire that was gradually overrun by the Turks & that is now the Republic of Turkey.102
9987130583Battle of Talas RiverArab victory over the Chinese in 751 CE that checked Chinese expansion to the west and enabled the conversion of Central Asia to Islam103
9987130584BedouinsNomadic Arabs104
9987130585dhimmis"protected subjects" under Islamic rule, non-Muslims who were allowed to practice their faith as "people of the book" in return for their paying special taxes105
9987130586al-GhazaliGreat Muslim theologian, legal scholar, and Sufi mystic (1058-1111) who was credited with incorporating Sufism into mainstream Islamic thought106
9987130587hadithsTraditions passed on about the sayings or actions of Muhammad and his immediate followers; hadiths rank second only to the Quran as a source of Islamic law107
9987130588hajjThe pilgrimage to Mecca enjoined on every Muslim who is able to make the journey; one of the Five Pillars of Islam.108
9987130589hijraThe "flight" of Muhammad and his original seventy followers from Mecca to Yathrib (later Medina) in 622CE; the journey marks the starting point of the Islamic calendar.109
9987130590House of WisdomAn academic center for research and translation of foreign texts that was established in Baghdad in 830 C.E. by the Abbasid caliph al-Mamun.110
9987130591Ibn BattutaFourteenth century Arab traveler (1304-1368) who wrote about his extensive journeys throughout the Islamic world.111
9987130592Ibn SinaOne of the greatest polymaths of the Islamic world (930-1037), a Persian who wrote prolifically on the scientific (esp. medicine) and philosophical issues; he is often known as "Avicenna," the Latinized form of his name.112
9987130593imamsIn Shia Islam, leaders with high religious authority; the twelve _____ of early Shia Islam were Muhammad's nephew Ali and his descendants113
9987130594jihadArabic of "struggle," this term describes both the spiritual striving of each Muslim toward a godly life and armed struggle against the forces of unbelief and evil.114
9987130595jizyaSpecial tax paid by dhimmis in Muslim-ruled territory in return for freedom to practice their own religion.115
9987130596KaabaGreat stone shrine in Mecca that was a major pilgrimage center for worshippers of many different deities before it was reconsecrated to monotheistic use by Muhammad.116
9987130597madrassasFormal colleges for higher institutions in the teaching of Islam as well as in secular subjects founded throughout the Islamic world in beginning in the 11th century117
9987130598MeccaKey pilgrimage center in Arabia that became the birthplace of Islam.118
9987130599Mozarabs"would-be Arabs" in Muslim-ruled Spain, referring to Christians who adopted much of Arabic culture and observed many Muslim practices without actually converting to Islam119
9987130600Muhammad Ibn AbdullahThe Prophet of Islam (570-632 C.E.)120
9987130601MuslimLiterally, "one who submits"; the name was adopted by Muhammad and his followers to describe their submission to God.121
9987130602Pillars of IslamFive core practices required of Muslims: a profession of faith, regular prayer, charitable giving, fasting during Ramadam, and a pilgrimage to Mecca (if financially and physically possible).122
9987130603Marco PoloThe most famous European traveler in the Middle Ages (1254-1324), whose travel account of his time in China was widely popular in Europe.123
9987130604Rightly Guided CaliphsThe first four rulers of the Islamic world (632-661) after the death of Muhammad.124
9987130605Quran (also Qur'án & Koran)Most holy text of Islam, recording the revelations given to the prophet Muhammad.125
9987130606shariahIslamic law, dealing with all matters of both secular and religious life.126
9987130607shakyhsSufi teachers who attracted a circle of disciples and often founded individual schools of Sufism.127
9987130608SikhismA significant syncretic religion that evolved in India, blending elements of Islam and Hinduism; founded by Guru Nanak (1469-1539)128
9987130609SufisIslamic mystics, many of whom were important missionaries of Islam in conquered lands and who were revered as saints.129
9987130610Sultanate of DelphiMajor Turkic Muslim state established in northern India in 1206130
9987130611TimbuktuGreat city of West Africa, noted as a center of Islamic scholarship in the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries.131
9987130612ulamasIslamic religious scholars.132
9987130613Umayyad caliphateFamily of caliphs who ruled the Islamic world from 661 to 750 C.E.133
9987130614ummaThe community of all believers in Islam.134
9987130514age-setAmong the Masai of East Africa, a group of boys united by a common initiation ceremony, who then moved together through the various "age-grades" and ranks of Masai life.135
9987130515Black DeathName later given to the massive plague pandemic that swept through Eurasia beginning in 1331; it is usually regarded as an outbreak of bubonic plague.136
9987130516Chinggis Khan(Genghis Khan)Title meaning "universal ruler" that was given to the Mongol leader Temujin in 1206 after he united the Mongols.137
9987130517fictive kinshipCommon form of tribal bonding in nomadic societies in which allies are designated and treated as blood relatives.138
9987130518Ghazan KhanIl-khan (subordinate khan) of Persia who ruled from 1295-1304; he is noted for his efforts to repair the Mongol damage to Persia.139
9987130519Hulegu KhanGrandson of Chinggis Khan (ca. 1217-1265) who became the first il-khan (subordinate khan) of Persia.140
9987130520kaghanSupreme ruler of a Turkic nomadic confederation.141
9987130521KarakorumCapital of the Mongol Empire.142
9987130522KhanbalikThe "city of the khan" founded as a new capital city for the Mongols after their conquest of China; now the city of Beijing.143
9987130523Khubilai KhanGrandson of Chinggis Khan who ruled China from 1271-1294.144
9987130524Kipchak KhanateName given to Russia by the Mongols after they conquered it and incorporated it into the Mongol Empire in the mid-thirteenth century; known to Russians as the "Khanate of the Golden Horde."145
9987130525MasaiNomadic cattle-keeping people of what is now Kenya and Tanzania.146
9987130526ModunGreat ruler of the Xiongnu Empire (r. 210-174 B.C.E.) who created a centralized and hierarchal political system.147
9987130527The Mongol World WarTerm used to describe half a century of military campaigns, massive killing, and empire building pursued by Chinggis Khan and his successors in Eurasia after 1209.148
9987130528pastoralismWay of life in which people depend on the herding of domesticated animals for their food supply.149
9987130529TemujinBirth name of the Mongol leader better known as Chinggis Khan (1162-1227).150
9987130530TurksTurkic speakers from Central Asia, originally nomads, who spread westward into the Near East and into India; they created a series of nomadic empires between 552 and 965 C.E. but had a more lasting impact on world history when they became dominant in the Islamic heartland and founded a series of states and empires there.151
9987130531XiongnuPeople of the Mongolian steps north of China who formed a large-scale nomadic empire in the third and second centuries B.C.E.152
9987130532Yuan DynastyMongol dynasty that ruled China from 1271-1368; its name means "great beginnings."153
9987130533Almoravid EmpireA Berber imperial dynasty of Morocco, who formed an empire in the 11th century that stretched over the western Maghreb and Al-Andalus. Founded by Abdallah ibn Yasin, their capital was Marrakesh, a city they founded in 1062.154

AP Literature: Rhetoric Flashcards

Vocabulary terms relating to rhetoric

Terms : Hide Images
8154872508antecedentthe word, phrase, or clause referred to by a pronoun0
8154872509antithesisthe direct opposite, a sharp contrast1
8154872510Apostropheaddress to an absent or imaginary person2
8154872511ChiasmusA statement consisting of two parallel parts in which the second part is structurally reversed3
8154872512ConsonanceRepetition of a consonant sound within two or more words in close proximity.4
8154872513DictionA writer's or speaker's choice of words5
8154872514DidacticIntended to teach6
8154872515DistortionAn exaggeration or stretching of the truth to achieve a desired effect.7
8154872516InversionA sentence in which the verb precedes the subject.8
8154872517OxymoronA figure of speech that combines opposite or contradictory terms in a brief phrase.9
8154872518ParallelismPhrases or sentences of a similar construction/meaning placed side by side, balancing each other10
8154872519PathosAppeal to emotion11
8154872520periodic sentencesentence whose main clause is withheld until the end12
8154872521RepetitionRepeated use of sounds, words, or ideas for effect and emphasis13
8154872522rhetorical questionA question asked merely for rhetorical effect and not requiring an answer14
8154872523shifta change in tone or attitude; key words include "but," "however," "even though," "although," "yet"15
8154872524ToneAttitude a writer takes toward the audience, a subject, or a character16

AP Literature Vocab Set 1 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
10546377122abstractunable to be touched; not concrete0
10546379298abstractiona concept or value that cannot be seen which the writer usually tries to illustrate by comparing it metaphorically to a known, concrete object1
10546383307allegorystory or poem in which characters, settings, and events stand for other people or events or for abstract ideas or qualities2
10546386272alliterationthe repetition of initial (beginning) constant sounds3
10546389193allusiona figure of speech, which makes brief reference to a historical or literary figure, event, or object4
10546394224ambiguitythe expression of an idea in language which gives more than one meaning and leaves uncertainty as to the true meaning5
10546396763anachronismsomething out of its place in time or history6
10546398630analogya comparison of two things that are similar in certain essential characteristics7
10546403520anapesta meter having two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed syllable8
10546405700anaphorarepetition of a word or expression at the beginning of successive phrases, clauses, sentences, or verses especially for rhetorical or poetic effect9
10546407900antagonistthe character in a narrative or play who is in conflict with the main character10
10546413677anthropomorphismattributing human characteristics to an animal or inanimate object (personification)11
10546416379anticlimaxthe intentional use of elevated language to describe the trivial or commonplace, or a sudden transition from a significant thought to a trivial one in order to achieve a humorous or satiric effect12
10546420600anti-heroa protagonist who is the antithesis of the hero13
10546422705antithesisbalancing words, phrases, or ideas that are strongly contrasted, often by means of grammatical structure14
10546426887aphorisma brief statement that expresses an observation on life, usually intended as a wise observation15
10546432217Apollonianrefers to the noble qualities of human beings and nature as opposed to the savage and destructive forces16
10546436754apostropheaddressing someone or something, usually not present, as though present17
10546438951apotheosisa larger-than-life presence; a godlike paragon worthy of respect and reverence18
10546440292asidea statement delivered by an actor in such a way that the other characters on stage are presumed not to have heard him19
10546443520archetypeA detail, image, or character type that occurs frequently in literature and myth and is thought to appeal in a universal way to the unconscious and to evoke a response20
10546446277argumentsassertions made based on facts, statistics, logical or objective reasoning, hard evidence, etc.21
10546447137assonancesimilarity or repetition of a vowel sound in two or more words, especially in a line of a verse22
10546450524asyndetonthe omission of conjunctions that ordinarily join coordinate words and phrases23
10546454816aubadea poem about the dawn or early morning24
10546466671camaraderierapport and goodwill25
10546467662frangiblefragile; easy to break26
10546467664litanya long, repetitive, or dull account27
10546469187moratoriuma suspension of activity; an authorized delay28
10546471564zealousfervent; fanatical29
10546472732desiccateto dry out; to remove moisture30
10546474466wrenchingcausing mental or physical pain31
10546475740repletefull; abundant32
10546477316interminabletiresome and long; seemingly endless33
10546478524arablesuitable for cultivation of land34
10546479268lugubriousmournful; gloomy35
10546479269truncateto shorten36
10546480636ubiquitousoccurring or seeming to occur everywhere; omnipresent37
10546481965vernaculareveryday language38
10546484320equanimitya composure; calmness39
10580446949Achilles' heelrefers to a person's area of particular vulnerability40
10580452339pound of fleshinsistence on being repaid41
10580453978sacred cowrefers to something that cannot be interfered with or harmed in any way42
10580461416crossing the Rubiconto take an irreversible step, often involving some danger43
10580467242pearls before swinerefers to offering something precious to someone or a group that are unable to appreciate the value of what they are being given44
10580477352once in a blue moondescribes something that occurs very rarely45
10580478791Mrs. Grundyrefers to such an attitude of narrow-minded prudishness46
10580483930crocodile tearsrefers to showing false sympathy for someone47
10580487636sirensanything that tempts a person away from safety and toward a destructive path48
10580491534read the riot actto issue a stern warning that if unacceptable behavior does not cease, severe consequences will follow49

AP Literature Vocab Set 1 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
10508941029Allocation1. The action or process of allocating or distributing something. (Noun) "more efficient allocation of resources"0
10508942435Ascetic1. Characterized by or suggesting the practice of severe self-discipline and abstention from all forms of indulgence. (Adj) "an ascetic life of prayer, fasting, and manual labor" 2. A person who practices severe self-discipline and abstention. (Noun) "the ascetic died alone on a mountain top"1
10508946769Beguile1. Charm or enchant, sometimes in a deceptive way. (Verb) "every prominent American artist has been beguiled by Maine"2
10508948368Crass1. Lacking sensitivity, refinement, or intelligence. (Adj) "the crass assumptions that men make about women"3
10508955431Defray1. Provide money to pay (Verb) "the proceeds from the raffle help to defray the expenses of the evening"4
10508959326Dint1. An impression or hollow in a surface. (Noun) "the soft dints at the top of a coconut" 2. Mark with impressions or hollows (Verb) "the metal was dull and dinted"5
10508965273Enjoin1. Instruct or urge (someone) to do something. (Verb) "the code enjoined members to trade fairly"6
10508970022Envoy1. A messenger or representative, especially one on a diplomatic mission. (Noun) "A diplomat is a governments official envoy"7
10508975796Interloper1. A person who becomes involved in a place or situation where they are not wanted or are considered not to belong. (Noun) "I had hoped to help my neighbors, but they regarded me as an interloper."8
10508981577Vicarious1. Experienced in the imagination through the feelings or actions of another person (Adj) "I could glean vicarious pleasure from the struggles of my imaginary film friends"9

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