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AP English Language and Composition Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
9964767574AllegoryA narrative in which characters and settings stand for abstract ideas or moral qualities Tells a literal story by using another story, a figurative one, to create ambiguity.0
9964767575AutobiographyAn account of a person's life written by that person An author's story of his of her own life, written in first person. Usually a chronological account1
9964767576BiographyA third-person account of someone's life. A story about a person's life written by another person.2
9964767577Blog Post/Weblog PostAn entry on a personal or professional website called a blog; can be on any topic, from any point of view, written for various audiences.3
9964767578Creative NonfictionA relatively new genre of writing that uses literary styles and techniques such as plot narratives, imagery, dialogue, etc... to create factually accurate narratives. Topics are diverse.4
9964767579Critique (Criticism)Points out the strengths and weaknesses of a work, similar to a review.5
9964767580DebateArgue the pros and cons of an issue6
9964767581DiaryA personal, daily account of an individual's experiences and feelings7
9964767582Excerpt(n.) A passage taken from a book, article, etc.; (v.) to take such a passage; to quote8
9964767583EditorialAn article giving opinions or perspectives of the editor/writer. Typically short (300-350 words) and generally persuasive.9
9964767584Eyewitness AccountA first-person report (primary source) of an individual who observes an important or significant event. As each person's point of view is affected by a wide variety of limiting factors, more than one account is desired for a more objective view of reality.10
9964767585FableA short story or narrative, typically with animal representatives of human types used as characters, conveying a moral lesson often for satirical purposes.11
9964767586Historical CommentaryHistory: a factual account of an event or point in time. Historical Commentary: A person's view of an event or period in time (opinion based on research, fact, or observation)12
9964767587HomilyA sermon or lecture, generally narrative in style, with a moralizing (didactic) purpose.13
9964767588ImageDescriptive or figurative language in a literary work; the use of language to create sensory impressions or a visual. Graph, chart, photograph or other type of infographic or visual.14
9964767589Letter (epistle)Epistle A written or printed communication addressed to a person or group Letters can take various forms, from business to personal. Historically letters from well-known writers, politicians, artists, and many others were preserved and viewed as historical documents or literary works. Letters are written for a wide variety of purposes: to inform, persuade, entertain, satirize, criticize, etc. The term epistolary style means in letter form15
9964767590Literary CriticismAnalyzes and comments on literature, beyond a review. Measures works of literature against current standards; an analysis of a work that investigates a certain aspect of the work such as symbolism or irony.16
9964767591MemoirA personal narrative that reflects upon one's own life experiences. Usually less chronological written from personal knowledge or special sources17
9964767592Monologue(n.) a speech by one actor; a long talk by one person One voice, generally first-person18
9964767593Personal ReminiscenceFirst person account of a particular event in time19
9964767594Political CartoonA visual aid that expresses opinions about political events in a humorous and pointed way. Generally a one-celled comic, primarily satire20
9964767595ReviewAn act of carefully looking at or examining the quality of literary works, movies or other visual media, art, music etc. The writer's informed opinion.21
9964767596SatireA work that reveals a critical attitude toward some element of human behavior by portraying it in an extreme way. It doesn't simply abuse (as in invective) or get personal (as in sarcasm). It targets groups or large concepts rather than individuals. A satirist highlights the faults of society with irony and humor.22
9964767597SermonA speech or message delivered by clergy usually spiritual and didactic in nature.23
9964767598Social CriticismExposure of the reasons for malicious conditions in a society considered to be in a flawed social structure such as social trends, philosophies, standards, morals... etc.24
9964767599SpeechOral essay, commentary, or public address delivered to an intended audience.25
9964767600TravelogueA speech, movie, or piece of writing about someone's experiences while traveling. The setting provides the basis for the writing. The author recognizes something significant in the setting.26
9964767601TreatiseA formal piece of writing, usually long, on a particular subject27
9964772885EthosThe ethical appeal, means to convince an audience of the author's credibility or character28
9964772886PathosThe emotional appeal, means to persuade an audience by appealing to their emotions29
9964772887LogosThe appeal to logic, means to convince an audience by use of logic or reason30
9964802792ToneIn literature, the tone of a literary work expresses the writer's attitude toward or feelings about the subject matter and audience.31

AP English Language and Composition Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
9969032692AllegoryThe device of using character and/or story elements symbolically.0
9969032693AntecedentWord, phrase, or clause referred to by a pronoun.1
9969032694AntithesisOpposition or contrast of ideas through parallelism.2
9969032695AphorismEarly to bed and early to rise help make a man healthy, wealthy, and wise. -Ben Franklin3
9969032696Apostrophe"Oh, Captain, my Captain, our fearful trip is done..."4
9969032697Colloquial/ColloquialismThe use of slang or informalities in speech or writing.5
9969032698ConceitA fanciful expression, usually in the form of an extended metaphor.6
9969032699Euphemismcorrectional facility = jail between jobs = unemployed7
9969032700HomilyThis term literally means "sermon," but more informally, it can include any serious talk, speech, or lecture involving moral or spiritual advice.8
9969032701InvectiveAn emotionally violent, verbal denunciation or attack using strong, abusive language.9
9969032702Metonymya figure of speech in which the name of one object is substituted for that of another closely associated with it.10
9969032703AnaphoraThe exact repetition of words or phrases at the beginning of successive lines or sentences.11
9969032704PedanticAn adjective that describes words, phrases, or general tone that is overly scholarly, academic, or bookish12
9969032705Proseone of the major divisions of genre, prose refers to fiction and nonfiction, including all its forms.13
9969032706SemanticsThe branch of linguistics that studies the meaning of words.14
9969032707SyllogismA deductive system of formal logic that presents two premises that inevitably lead to a sound conclusion.15
9969032708SynecdocheA figure of speech in which a part of something is used to represent the whole.16
9969032709SynesthesiaWhen one kind of sensory stimulus evokes the subjective experience of another.17
9969032710ApologiaA written or spoken defense of one's beliefs and actions.18
9969032711EpigramA brief witty statement.19
9969032712DigressionThe use of material unrelated to the subject of a work.20
9969032713EllipsisThe omission of a word or several words.21
9969032714Ad HominemAttacking a speaker's character instead of to their argument.22
9969032715AnachronismA person, scene, event or other element that fails to correspond with the appropriate time or era.23
9969032716DidacticHaving an instructive purpose; intending to convey information to teach a lesson usually in a dry, pompous manner.24
9969032717FallacyAn incorrect belief or supposition based on faulty data, defective evidence, or false information.25
9969032718HubrisExcessive pride that often brings about one's fall.26
9969032719AlliterationRepetition of consonant sounds, usually at the beginnings of words27
9969032720LitotesA form of understatement in which the negative of the contrary is used to achieve emphasis or intensity.28
9969032721ParadoxA statement or idea that seems contradictory but is in fact true.29
9969032722Non SequiturA statement or idea that fails to follow logically from the one before.30
9969032723AnecdoteA short and amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person.31
9969032724JargonSpecial words or expressions that are used by a particular profession or group.32
9969032725TaciturnNot talking much, reserved; silent, holding back in conversation.33
9969032726DogmaticInclined to lay down principles as incontrovertibly true.34
9969032727PerniciousHaving a harmful effect, especially in a gradual or subtle way.35
9969032728BellicoseDemonstrating aggression and willingness to fight.36
9969032729VoraciousCraving or consuming large quantities of food.37
9969032730ZealousHaving or showing zeal.38
9969032731TacitUnderstood or implied without being stated.39
9969032732InnuendoAn allusive or oblique remark or hint, typically a suggestive or disparaging one.40
9969032733LackadaisicalDisplaying or having a disinclination for physical exertion or effort; slow and relaxed.41
9969032734ConsecrateMake or declare (something, typically a church) sacred; dedicate formally to a religious or divine purpose.42
9969032735ChiasmusA type of parallelism in which elements are reversed. "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country."43
9969032736Loose SentenceA sentence in which the subject and verb come at the front of the sentence.44
9969032737PetulantChildishly sulky or bad-tempered.45
9969032738Periodic SentenceA sentence in which the subject and verb come toward the end of the sentence.46
9969032739ExhortStrongly encourage or urge someone to do something.47
9969032740CloisteredKept away from the outside world; sheltered.48
9969032741SarcasmCaustic, bitter language--iterally means "to tear the flesh."49
9969032742Independent ClauseA complete sentence.50
9969032743Dependent ClauseIncludes a subordinate conjunction, such as because, while, etc.51
9969032744AllusionA reference to something (e.g., a book, a movie, an historical event) that is presumed to be well known to the audience.52
9969032745SatireA work that pokes fun human vices and follies in order to call attention to a larger problem.53
9969032746ParodyA work that closely imitates the style or content of another with the specific aim of comic effect and/or ridicule.54
9969032747Coup de GraceThe "death blow"--the culminating event in a bad situation.55
9969032748Coup d'EtatLiterally "blow to the state"--a violent overthrow.56
9969032749Faux PasA social misstep or inappropriate action.57
9969032750Laissez-FaireLiterally "allow to do"--letting things run their natural course; hands off.58
9969032751En MasseIn a body as a whole; as a group.59
9969032752ProprietaryCharacteristic of an owner of property; constituting property.60
9969032753ProprietyThe quality of behaving in a proper manner; obeying rules and customs.61
9969032754ImminentAbout to happen.62
9969032755EminentFamous, outstanding, distinguished.63
9969032756EgoAccording to Freud, the decision-making component of personality that operates according to the reality principle.64
9969032757SuperegoAccording to Freud, that facet of the psyche that represents the internalized ideals and values of one's parents and society65
9969032758IdLiterally the "It"--our base impulses, driven by selfishness and greed, for example.66
9969032759HamartiaA character's error in judgment that contributes to one's downfall.67
9969032760OrwellianThe manipulation of language and ideas to control and obstruct the truth.68
9969032761AutonomosIndependent, self-governing, not under the control of something or someone else.69

AP Human Geography: Language Flashcards

Language

Terms : Hide Images
6682566902AccentA distinctive mode of pronunciation of a language, especially one associated with a particular nation, locality, or social class.0
6682566903DialectA regional variation of a language distinguished by vocabulary, spelling, and pronunciation, particular to a specific region or social group.1
6682566904Extinct LanguageA language that no longer has any speakers, or that is no longer in current use.2
6682566905IdeogramA written character symbolizing the idea of a thing without indicating the sounds used to say it. Used in Mandarin (Chinese)3
6682566906IsoglossA geographic boundary line delimiting the area in which a given linguistic feature occurs.4
6682566907Isolated LanguageA natural language with no demonstrable genealogical (or "genetic") relationship with other languages or language families; that is, one that has not been demonstrated to descend from an ancestor common with any other language. i.e A language family with only one language. (Basque)5
6682566908Language BranchA Subsection of a Language Family. Differences are not as extensive or old as with language families. i.e The Romance "-------" of the Indo-European language family.6
6682566909LanguageThe method of human communication, either spoken or written, consisting of the use of words in a structured and conventional way.7
6682566910Language GroupA Collection of languages within a branch that share a common origin in the relatively recent past and display relatively few differences in grammar and vocabulary. An individual language, including all dialects (I.e. Italian, German, English)8
6682566911Language FamilyA collection of languages related to each other through a common ancestor long before recorded history. The trunk of the language tree, from which language branches come from.9
6682566912Indo European language familyLargest language family that includes English and most other languages in the Western Hemisphere. Also used in South and Southwest Asia. Includes the Germanic branch, Indo-Iranian branch, Balto-Slavic branch, and Romance branch.10
6682566913Sino-Tibetan Language Family2nd largest language family. Includes Madarin, Thai, Cantonese and Burmese11
6682566914Lingua FrancaA Language mutually understood and commonly used in trade by people who have different native languages (currently English worldwide).12
6682566915Literary TraditionA Language that is written as well as spoken.13
6682566916Monolingual StateA country in which only one language is spoken (i.e. Japan, Korea)14
6682566917BilingualThe ability to speak two languages.15
6682566918Multilingual StateA country in which more than one language is in use (India, Nigeria, Belgium, Switzerland)16
6682566919Official LanguageThe language adopted for use by the government for the conduct of business and publication of documents, a language that is given special legal status.17
6682566920OrthographyThe conventional spelling system of a language.18
6682566921Pidgin LanguageA Form of speech that adopts a simplified grammar and limited vocabulary of a lingua franca, used for communications among speakers of two different languages.19
6682566922Standard LanguageThe specific form of a language used for official government business, education, and mass communications.20
6682566923ToponymThe name of a place, often reflecting that place's history and culture.21
6682566924VernacularUsing a language or dialect native to a region or country rather than a literary, cultured, or foreign language. It is usually the language of the common people.22
6682566925CreoleA language that results from the mixing of a colonizer's language with the indigenous language of the people being dominated. Developed out of an earlier pidgin stage.23
6682566926DenglishThe term is used in all German-speaking countries to refer to the increasingly strong influx of English or pseudo-English vocabulary into German.24
6682566927FranglaisA form of French using many words and idioms borrowed from English.25
6682566928EbonicsA dialect of English spoken by some African Americans.26
6682566929SpanglishA hybrid language combining words and idioms from both Spanish and English, especially Spanish speech that uses many English words and expressions.27
6682566930FrancophonePlaces and countries where French is spoken around the world. (Quebec in Canada, Vietnam, Haiti, Sub-Saharan Africa, Belgium, Switzerland, France).28
6682566931HankulThe system of writing Korean is written in. In this system, each letter represents a sound.29
6682566932Romance BranchA language branch of the Indo-European Language Family. This branch includes languages that evolved from Latin (the language of the Romans). The 5 main languages include: Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, and Romanian.30
6682566933Germanic BranchA language branch of the Indo-European Language Family. This branch is divided into North and West Germanic. North Germanic includes Scandinavian languages (Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic), which all came from Old Norse. West Germanic is further divided into High Germanic and Low Germanic subgroups. High German includes the standard German language. Low German includes English, Dutch, Flemish (Dialect of Dutch), Afrikaaans, and Frisian.31
6682566934Indo-Iranian BranchThe branch of the Indo-European language family with the most speakers. This branch includes more than 100 individual languages divided into an eastern group (Indic), which includes the languages of Hinid and Urdu and a western group (Iranian), which includes Farsi and Kurdish.32
6682566935Balto-Slavic BranchThis branch of the Indo-European language family can be broken down into four groups: East Slavic (Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian), Baltic (Latvian, Lithuanian), West Slavic (Polish, Czech, and Slovak), and South Slavic (Serbo-Croatian). Russian is the most widely used language in this branch, due to the spread of the Soviet Union.33
6682566936Celtic BranchA language branch of the Indo-European Language Family. This branch includes the languages of the British Isles before the invasion of the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes. This branch is divided into two language groups: Goidelic(Gaelic), which includes Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic, and Brythonic, which includes Welsh, Breton, and Cornish. These languages declined because the Celts lost most of their territory and the English colonizers forbid the use of the Celtic languages.34
6682566937Uralic Language FamilyLanguage Family in Europe that includes the languages of Estonian, Finnish, and Hungarian. Languages in this family originated from the Ural mountains in Russia, spreading through migration.35
6682566938Austronesian Language FamilyLanguage Family spoken mostly in Indonesia. This family includes the languages of Javanese, Indonesian, Malay, and Malagasy. The most spoken language in this family is Javanese, since Java is the populous island of Indonesia. The Indonesian language is used as a lingua franca in Indonesia, due to so many different native languages (739 active languages). Malay is spoken in Malaysia, Malagasy is spoken in Madagascar.36
6682566939Afro-Asiatic Language FamilyThis language family is found in northern Africa and southwestern Asia (Middle East), where Islam is the dominant religion. This family includes the languages of Arabic and Hebrew. Hebrew is spoken in Israel, a Jewish state, and Arabic is spoken throughout the region since it is the language of the Koran, the Islamic holy book.37
6682566940Niger-Congo Language FamilyMore than 95% of people in Sub-Saharan Africa speak languages from this family. This family includes Swahili, the lingua franca in Africa, used by many to communicate as a second language, due to so many different native languages.38
6682566941Prehistoric SubgroupA language that predates the current language family, before the written record. Ex: Proto-Indo-European39
6682566942Altaic Language FamilyA language family spoken across central Asia named after the Altai Mountains. The most spoken language in this family is Turkish. The family also includes the languages spoken in the Caucasus Region and across Central Asia, previously controlled by the Soviet Union. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, newly independent countries in these regions reverted to their native languages in this family, including the countries of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Mongolia and Georgia.40
6682566943Kurgan TheoryProposed by Marija Gimbutas, this theory argues the Proto-Indo-European language diffused by military conquest as nomadic herders on horseback (Kurgans) invaded west from the Asian Steppe ( border between Russia and Kazakhstan) around 4300 B.C in search of grasslands.41
6682566944Renfrew (Anatolian) TheoryProposed by Colin renfrew, this theory argues the Proto-Indo-European language diffused by way of agriculktural practices from Anatolia (Turkey) in 6300 BC.42
6682566945British Received Pronunciation (BRP)The dialect of English associated with upper class Britons living in the London area now considered the standard form of British speech.43
6682566946Language DivergenceWhen a lack of spatial interaction (isolation) among speakers of a language breaks the language into dialects and then new languages.44
6682566947Language ConvergenceWhen peoples with different languages have consistent spatial interaction and their languages collapse into one (i.e. pidgin and creole).45
6682566948Backward ReconstructionWhen linguists track sound shifts and the hardening of consonants backward to reveal an "original" language.46
6682566949Sound ShiftSlight word change in language within the subfamilies and language family from present time, backward to its origin (i.e: lacte in Latin, latta in Italian).47
6682566950Treaty of TordesillasPope Alexander VI's 1493 decision that officially split the New World into two empires, with Spain getting the West and Portugal the East.48
6682566951HindiApproximately one-third of Indians, mostly in the north, use this Indic language. This language can be spoken in many different ways, but there is only one official way to write the language, using a script called Devanagari. It serves as the lingua franca in India and is used by the government, growing into a national language in the nineteenth century when the British encouraged its use in government. It is part of the Indo-Iranian branch.49
6682566952SwahiliThe lingua franca in Africa, used by many to communicate as a second language, due to so many different native languages. This language was developed between African and Arab traders and is one for the few African languages with extensive literature. It is part of the Niger-Congo language family.50
6682566953UrduPakistan's principal language, spoken very much like Hindi but written with the Arabic alphabet, a legacy of the fact that most Pakistanis are Muslims, and their holiest book (the Quran) is written in Arabic. It is part of the Indo-Iranian branch.51
6682566954FarsiThe principle language of Iran, a remnant of the Persian Empire. It is written with the Arabic alphabet since Iran is a Muslim country. This language is part of the Indo-Iranian branch.52
6682566955MandarinThis language is the most spoken language in the world. It is spoken by approximately three-fourths of the Chinese people, and is used by the Chinese government. There is no single Chinese language. Instead of letters, Chinese languages use ideograms (characters) that mostly represent concepts rather than sounds.53
6682566956ArabicThis language serves as a unifying force in the Middle East (Northern Africa and Southwest Asia), typically referred to as the Arab World. This language is the language of Islam (used in the Koran),, which is predominant throughout the region. This language belongs to the Afro-Asiatic language family and is the official language in two dozen countries of North Africa and southwestern Asia, from Morocco to the Arabian Peninsula.54
6682566957HebrewThis language was an extinct language that has been revived. It diminished in use in the fourth century B.C. and was thereafter retained only for Jewish religious services. When Israel was established in 1948, this language became one of the new country's two official languages, along with Arabic. This language was chosen to unify the Jews of Israel and give them a sense of nationalism, since Israel was created by Jewish refugees and migrants who spoke many different languages. Reviving this language required the creation of many new words for the modern world.55
6682566958Irish GaelicThis is one of the two official languages of Ireland, along with English. This language was forbidden under English rule. When Ireland got their independence form England in 1922, this language became an important part of their cultural identity and sense of nationalism and became a compulsory course in all public schools and required for public service jobs.56
6682566959BasqueAlso known as Euskera, this isolated language predates the Indo-European language and is not related to any other language family in Europe. Spoken in the Pyrenees Mountains (between Spain and France), the mountainous homeland created isolation, making the preservation of the language possible.57
6682566960WelshThis is one of the two official languages of Wales, along with English. This language was forbidden under English rule, but has been revived in recent years. This language is a compulsory subject in all schools in Wales and knowledge of the language is now required for many jobs in Wales. Bilingual signs and television and radio programs have also been added to help preserve this language.58
6682566961InuktitutThe language spoken by the Inuits (indigenous tribe) of northern Canada. It is recognized as an official language, along with English and French in Nunavut, the Inuit territory of Canada. Similar to the Celtic languages, it has declined with the forces of globalization and is undergoing a revival since it is an important part of the Inuit culture and is taught in schools and represented on bilingual signs and in the government.59
6682566962GlobalizationThe process by which businesses or other organizations develop international influence and operate on an international scale. Currently, America dominates the world with multinational corporations and media, which has made English the world's current lingua franca (international language of business).60
6682566963QuebecThis province in Canada primarily speaks French, due to its history of colonization. As a result, Canada is officially bilingual, recognizing both English and French as official languages.61
6682566964Vulgar LatinThis language was spoken by the Roman army at the time of occupation and is the basis of the Romance languages, which evolved out of this language overtime due to isolation.62
6682566965Latin AmericaThis region of the Americas primarily speaks Romance Languages, which derived from Latin. Brazil speaks Portuguese, Haiti and French Guiana speak French, while the majority of the other countries speak Spanish, all due to the patterns of colonization.63
6682566966BelgiumThis multilingual state in Europe, which is part of the francophone world, has experienced tensions between its two language groups. The Flemings live in the north province Flanders and speak Flemish, a Dutch dialect. The Walloons live in the south province Wallonia and speak French. Brussels, the capital city if officially bilingual to create a since of unity in the country. Antagonism between the Flemings and Walloons is aggravated by economic and political differences. Historically, the Walloons dominated Belgium's economy and politics and French was the official state language.64
6682566967SwitzerlandThis multilingual state in Europe, which is part of the francophone world, remains peaceful with four official languages (German, French, Italian, and Romanish). This country has institutionalized cultural diversity by creating a form of government that places considerable power in local, small communities (Decenetralization).65

El Ocio/ AP Spanish Language & Culture Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
8753406909el ocioleisure time0
8753406910Disfruta, come y bebe; que la vida es breve."Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die." (enjoy life)1
8753406911modismosidiom; expression2
8753406912le daba la real ganait made him/her/it/you (formal) feel like doing something3
8753406913tener ganas deto feel like (doing something)4
8753406914hacer alarde deto show off; to display; to boast about smth.5
8753406915juegos de palabrasword games6
8753406916la corrientecurrent (water or electricity)7
8753406917agua corrienterunning water8
8753406918la corriente eléctricaelectrical current9
8753406919la cuenta corrientechecking account; current (bank) account10
8753406920en mi época(back) in my day11
8753406921matar el tiempoto kill time12
8753406922muchas vecesoften; many times13
8753406923hacía mal tiempothe weather was bad14
8753406924a tiempoon time15
8753406925la hora detime to...16
8753406926la conferenciaconference17
8753406927lecturalecture; reading18
8753406928coleccionarto collect; to accumulate19
8753406929cerámicoceramic; clay20
8753406930cuadrosquare; frame; canvas; painting; (baseball) diamond21
8753406931discodisc22
8753406932miniaturaminiature; figurine23
8753406933monedamoney24
8753406934muñecadoll (also wrist)25
8753406935sellostamp; seal26
8753406936tarjeta de deportessports card (?); (baseball card perhaps?)27
8753406937ir de campingto go camping28
8753406938botiquín de medicinasfirst-aid kit29
8753406939campistacamper; outdoorsman; outdoorswoman; outdoorsy person30
8753406940equipajeequipment31
8753406941fogatacampfire32
8753406942intemperieoutdoors; (the great outdoors)33
8753406943montañeromountanier34
8753406944campañacountry; countryside35
8753406945motivosmotive; reason for doing smth.36
8753406946calmarseto calm oneself37
8753406947descansarto relax38
8753406948entretenerseto entertain oneself; to make oneself busy; to distract oneself39
8753406949reír a carcajadasto guffaw; to laugh loudly and crudely40
8753406950patrocinar las artesto promote, sponsor the arts41
8753406951ir al cineto go to the movies, to the theater42
8753406952filmadofilmed (adj)43
8753406953filmfilm; movie44
8753406954pantallascreen45
8753406955películamovie46
8753406956ir al teatroto go to the theater47
8753406957butacasarmchair; fancy, large seat (often found in movie theaters)48
8753406958estrenopremiere; debut49
8753406959guiónscript50
8753406960ir a un conciertoto go to a concert51
8753406961disco compactocompact disc; CD52
8753406962disco de vinilorecord; vinyl disc53
8753406963guitarraguitar54
8753406964grabaciónrecording55
8753406965grabarto record56
8753406966tocar un instrumentoto play an instrument57
8753406967actividadesactivities58
8753406968buscar aventurasto seek out adventure59
8753406969cazar perdicesto hunt partidges60
8753406970dar un caminatato take a walk, stroll61
8753406971esbozar dibujosto sketch; to make an outline62
8753406972hacer una cadena de floresto make a chain of flowers (?)63
8753406973ir a una fiestato go to a party64
8753406974jugar al bolicheto bowl; to go bowling65
8753406975jugar al esconditeto play hide and seek66
8753406976jugar a la rayuelato play hopskotch67
8753406977leer tiras cómicasto read comic strips68
8753406978montar en bicicletato ride a bike69
8753406979palabras útilesuseful words70
8753406980advertirto warn71
8753406981afichesposters72
8753406982aguardarto wait; to anticipate73
8753406983aplazarto postpone; to adjourn74
8753406984aportarto contribute; to put in (effort, money, etc)75
8753406985arrancarto strip out; to remove to originate76
8753406986arrugarto wrinkle; to furrow (brow)77
8753406987comprobarto confirm; to verify; to test out78
8753406988cotidianodaily; everyday (adj)79
8753406989desarrollodevelopment80
8753406990destellossparkles; glitter81
8753406991destacarto stack; to develop82
8753406992disponibleavailable83
8753406993entablarto start up; to initiate; to break the ice; to get things going84
8753406994gatillotrigger85
8753406995oníricodreamlike; magical; unreal86
8753406996refunfuñarto grumble; to complain under one's breath87
8753406997risueñosmiling; smiley (active participle)88
8753406998silbarwhistle89
8753406999dibujarto draw90
8753407000jugar al ajedrezto play chess91
8753407001tejer un suéterto weave, knit a sweater92
8753407002pasearseto walk, stroll about93
8753407003montar a caballoto ride a horse; to go horseback riding94
8753407004participar en el tiro al arcoto partake in archery95
8753407005accesoriosaccessories96
8753407006pincel y lienzopaintbrush and canvas97
8753407007tienda y mochilatent and backpack98
8753407008tabla y pieza(??) table and object; piece (??)99
8753407009aguja e hiloneedle and thread100
8753407010bastóncane; walking stick101
8753407011riendas y bocadoreins and mouthful (???)102
8753407012arco y flechasbow and arrow103
8753407013resultadosresults104
8753407014tener placer estéticoto be aesthetically pleasing105
8753407015apreciar el medio ambienteto appreciate the environment106
8753407016divertirseto enjoy oneself; to have fun107
8753407017regalarle algo a alguiento gift (give) something to someone108
8753407018renovarseto renew oneself; to make changes to oneself; (lit) to renovate oneself109
8753407019aliviar el estrésto alleviate stress110
8753407020evitar el aburrimientoto avoid boredom111
8753407021pasar el tiempoto pass time; to spend time112

AP Psychology Thinking and Language Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
8656398942Cognitionthe mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating.0
8656398943Concepta mental grouping of similar objects, events, ideas, or people.1
8656398944Prototypea mental image or best example of a category. Matching new items to a prototype provides quick/easy methods for sorting things.2
8656398945Algorithma methodical, logical rule or procedure that guarantees solving a particular problem.3
8656398946Heuristica simple thinking strategy that often allows us to make judgements and solve problems efficiently.4
8656398947Insighta sudden and often novel realization of the solution to a problem; it contrasts with strategy-based solutions.5
8656398948Confirmation biasa tendency to search for information that supports our preconceptions and to ignore or distort contradictory evidence.6
8656398949Fixationthe inability to see a problem from a new perspective, by employing a different mindset.7
8656398950Mental seta tendency to approach a problem in one particular way, often a way that has been successful in the past.8
8656398951Functional fixednessthe tendency to think of things only in terms of their usual functions; an impediment to problem solving.9
8656398952representative heuristicjudging the likely-hood of things based on how well they represent, or match, particularly prototypes. (Truck driver and librarian)10
8656398953Availability heuristicestimating the likely-hood of events based on their availability in memory; if instances come readily to mind we presume such events are common.11
8656398954Overconfidencethe tendency to be more confident than correct; to overestimate the accuracy of our beliefs and judgements12
8656398955Belief perserverenceclinging to ones initial concepts after the basis on which they were formed has been discredited.13
8656398956Intuitionan effortless, immediate, automatic feeling or thought as contrasted with explicit, conscious reasoning.14
8656398957Framingthe way an issue is posed; can significantly affect decisions and judgments.15
8656398958Phonemesin language, the smallest distinctive sound unit.16
8656398959Morphemesin language, the smallest unit that carries meaning; may be part of a word.17
8656398960Grammarin a language, a system of rules that enables us to communicate with and understand each other.18
8656398961Semanticsthe set of rules by which we derive the MEANING from morphemes, words, and sentences in a given language; also the study of MEANING.19
8656398962Syntaxthe rules for combining words into grammatically sensible sentences in a given language.20
8656398963Babbling Stagebeginning at about 4 months, the stage of speech development in which the infant spontaneously utters various sounds at first unrelated to the household language.21
8656398964One word stagethe stage in speech development, from age 1 to 2 , during with a child speaks mostly in single words.22
8656398965Two word stagebeginning about age 2, the stage in speech development during which a child speaks mostly 2 word statements.23
8656398966Telegraphic speechearly speech stage in which a child speaks like a telegram using mostly nouns and verbs.24
8656398967Aphasiaimpairment of language, usually caused by left hemisphere damage either to Broca's area or to Wernicke's area.25
8656398968Broca's Areacontrols language expression; an area of the frontal lobe, usually in the left hemisphere of the brain, that directs the muscle movements involving speech. (Controls speech muscles via the motor cortex)26
8656398969Wernicke's Areacontrols language reception; a brain area involving in language comprehension and expression; usually in the left temporal lobe. (Interprets auditory code)27

AP Language Vocab 2 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5434838097UltracrepidarianA person who gives advice on a subject that is beyond his experience0
5434838098PropensityNatural inclination or tendency1
5434838099ConflagrationFire2
5434838100SlanderMalicious, false, defamatory statement or report3
5434838101SojournA temporary stay4
5434838102PervasiveSpread throughout5
5434838103PedanticOverly concerned with minute details or formalism, ostentatious in one's learning6
5434838104InsufferableIntolerable, unbearable7
5434838105AcrimoniousBitter in nature, speech, behavior8
5434838106VerisimilitudeAppearance of truth likelihood probability9
5434838107ObfuscateTo purposefully confuse, make obscure or unclear10
5434838108EtymologyStudy of the origins of words11
5434838109BanterAn exchange of light teasing or playful remarks12
5434838110OntologicalMetaphysical study of the nature or existence13
5434838111NascentBrand new, fledging14
5434838112PerennialRecurring regularly15
5434838113BrusqueBlunt, abrupt, rough16
5434838114FastidiousExcessively particular, hard to please17
5434838115LudicrousRidiculous, laughable, absurd18
5434838116BolsterTo hold up or support19

AP Language Unit 4 Vocab Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5780760639atrophythe wasting away of a body organ or tissue0
5780763372bastiona fortified place, stronghold1
5780763822concorda state of agreement, harmony; a treaty, pact, or covenant2
5780764763consummateto complete or perfect to the highest degree3
5780765178disarraydisorder, confusion4
5780766228exigencyurgency, pressure; urgent demand, pressing need; an emergency.5
5780767791flotsamfloating debris; homeless, impoverished people6
5780768694freneticfrenzied, highly agitated7
5780769234gleanto gather bit by bit8
5780769235grousea type of game bird; a complaint9
5780770095incarcerateto imprison, confine, jail10
5780771461incumbentobligatory, required; one who holds office.11
5780775234jocularhumorous, jesting, joking12
5780775874ludicrous(adj.) ridiculous, laughable, absurd13
5780777581mordant(adj.) biting or caustic in though; sharply or bitterly harsh14
5780779215nettle(n.) a prickly plant; (v.) to anger or irritate15
5780780092pecuniary(adj.) measured in money; related to money16
5780781551pusillanimous(adj.) cowardly or mean-spirited17
5780782211recumbent(adj.) in a reclining position, lying down18
5780783304stratagem(n.) a scheme to outwit or decieve19

Ap Language Vocabulary Quiz 1 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
4861607836Adjunctionsomething that is joined or added to another thing, but not part of the whole,At the family reunion, I felt like an adjunct member because I was not blood related to anyone.0
4870405927Bellwethersomething or someone that points out upcoming trends,At his brokerage firm, Ted is known as the bellwether because he always knows which stocks will become profitable.1
4870564189Caterwaulmake a shrill howling or wailing noise.2
4870565313Chimericalan invention of an individual's imagination,The company was fined when the government discovered it had used chimerical data to get approval for its new drug.3
4870566494Effetelacking strength, courage, or spirit,,,,,The effete man was scared of his own shadow and hid in the closet during thunderstorms.4
4870569016Fait accomplialready completed and unchangeable.The low grade on my project was a fait accompli the teacher saw no reason to alter.5
4870570967Hideboundrigidly opposed to change,,The hidebound politician refused to change his position on the abortion bill6
4870572949Hierarchya ranking system designed to maintain order in a society or organization.In regards to political decisions, the prime minister sits at the top of the British hierarchy.7
4870574177Laissez-faireThe policy of not interfering in the affairs of others.Since the dictator is killing Christians in his country, there is no way Christian nations can simply do nothing while observing a laissez-faire policy.8
4870575278Liturgypreset practices that are carried out during a religious service or event The priest has performed the baptismal liturgy over five hundred times.9
4870576899Morassa complicated or confusing situation.Even the smartest lawyer will find it difficult to find a solution for this legal morass.10
4870577318Noisomedisgusting in smell.The dog's noisome odor is making me physically ill.11
4870580264Obliviousunaware of what is present or occurring.The huge dog closed its eyes and appeared oblivious to the crawling baby.12
4870581279Poltroonone who acts in a cowardly manner.The poltroon was the coward who sent an anonymous hate letter to the president.13
4870582779Proselytea person who has converted from one opinion, religion, or party to another, especially recently.The earliest to be thus edited was the Targum of Onkelos (Ongelos), the proselyte, on the Law.14
4870585114Quasihaving features that are similar to another thing.Since my father was in the military for twenty-five years, he treats our home like it is a quasi-base camp.15
4870586145Raillerygood-natured bantering.While many people think the brothers are arguing, they're usually just engaging in some fun raillery.16
4870587120Ribaldoffensive or vulgar humor.The comic's sexual jokes were too ribald for my religious mother17
4870589299Supinelying face upward.My brother-in-law is a lazy fellow who will sleep with his head up in a supine position all day long.18
4870590613Vignettea short but meaningful account. As an assignment, we were asked to read a two-page vignette and then sum up the writer's opinion on immigration.19

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