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AP Euro "isms" Flashcards

AP European history set of "isms"

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8729726499AbsolutismA form of government in which the king has complete control0
8729726500AnarchismA political theory favoring the abolition of governments1
8729726501Anti-semitismPrejudice against Jews2
8729726502CapitalismEconomic system in which capital is controlled my individuals, not by the state. The economy grows through the efforts of each individual to make the most profit. Possession of the property is the foundation for personal independence and political liberty.3
8729726503ColonialismClosely related to imperialism. the idea that countries should settle their own people (establish colonies) in lands they conquer to manage the economic exploitation of the area and to govern it.4
8729726504CommunismA form of government and a way to manage the economy that puts all power in the hands of the Communist Party, ostensibly to manage the country for the good of the "people." "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs."5
8729726505ConservatismThe idea that change should come slowly, if at all.6
8729726506CubismEarly 20th century art movement, practiced by Picasso and others.7
8729726507Cultural RelativismThe idea that all cultures have the same problems and solve them in different ways that fit their special geographical and historical conditions. No on culture is better than another; they are just "different."8
8729726508DeismThe belief that God exists and created the world but thereafter assumed no control over it or over the lives of people; God is a "watch maker."9
8729726509Enlightened DespotismAbsolute rule justifies not on grounds of heredity or divine right. Secular in outlook and justification, as in Frederick the Great's self-description as "the first servant of the state." Used to rationalize and organize the state from the top down during the Age of the Enlightenment. Other example is Joseph II of Austria10
8729726510Fascism"Nationalism on steroids." Also a hierarchical economic system not unlike feudalism except that everyone is working at the behest of and for the benefit of the state.11
8729726511FeudalismA hierarchical system of government and agriculture based on private contract. Land, worked by serfs attached to it, was held by vassals in exchange for military service and other duties to lords.12
8729726512HumanismThe intellectual and culture movement that grew out of the study of Greek and Roman literature at the end of the Middle Ages. It was an important factor in the rise of the Renaissance. Characterized by an emphasis on human interests and characteristics rather than the natural world or religion.13
8729726513ImperialismThe desire of a country to take over and exploit foreign lands, usually inhabited by people of different ethnicity or religion. Economic motive is to acquire raw materials.14
8729726514ImpressionismFrench art movement started around 1871 with Monet's "Impression of the Sunrise" at Salon des Refuses in Paris.15
8729726515IndividualismThe idea that the individual is more important than the state or any other group.16
8729726516JansenismIdeas of 17th century French Catholics who favored Calvinist interpretation of Christianity just the same.17
8729726517Liberalism19th century political philosophy supported mostly by business and professional men. They support only limited suffrage. They favor freedom for the individual, so they fear the "mob."strong emphasis on the rights of property., Generally they favored laissez-faire economics, especially at the beginning of the 19th century - keep the government out of the economy and let each individual have as much freedom as possibly to improve himself. Advocated free trade (so they opposed mercantilism). Generally they opposed militarism. Favors constitutionalism "stake in society" theory, and nationalism, because of the idea that people should be governed with their own consent.18
8729726518MaterialismThe idea that only what is tangible is real. "Everything mental, spiritual or ideal is an outgrowth of physical or physiological forces." Karl Marx and Thomas Hobbes believed in this.19
8729726519MercantilismAn economic policy under which nations sought to increase their wealth and power by obtaining large amounts of gold and silver and by favoring exporting rather than importing.20
8729726520NationalismThe idea that people of the same language, religion, ethnicity, or heritage should have their own government on their own land.21
8729726521NaturalismLiterary movement following realism in literature. Demonstrates the determination of human character by the natural and social environment.22
8729726522NihilismIdeas of disgruntled intellectuals in 1860s Russia. They believed in "nothing" except science.23
8729726523Pan-SlavismThe idea that Slavic peoples should identify with each other and have their own nation. Heavily promoted by Russia at the end of the 19th century as a way to promote her own imperialistic aspirations in the Balkans.24
8729726524PantheismThe belief that God and the universe are identical, which denies the personality and transcendence of God.25
8729726525PositivismPhilosophy identified with French philosopher Auguste Comte. Insists on verifiable facts, avoidance of wishful thinking, questioning of all assumptions, dislike of improbable generalizations.26
8729726526Post-modernismIn culture it is associated with surfaces and superficial style including self-conscious parody and quotation. It is a reaction to the naive confidence in progress and also confidence in objective of scientific truth.27
8729726527RealismArt and literature movement that followed Romanticism. Closely allied with realpolitik in government. as a philosophy it is a "kind of unrealistic faith in the constructive value struggle and a tough-minded rejection of ideas and ideals."28
8729726528RadicalismEnglish movement of philosophers who wanted to "deduce the right form of institutions from the very nature of and psychology of man himself." Favored universal manhood suffrage and reform of Parliament.29
8729726529RelativismThe idea that truth is not absolute, but rather is subjective. It maintains that the basis for judgement depends on the events, people, or circumstances surrounding a given situation.30
8729726530RepublicanismFrench idea that a republican form of government is best. Opposed to the monarchists who were scared of the excesses of the Jacobins and their ancestors. Unlike liberals they favor universal suffrage. They are opposed to monarchy of any variety and they are opposed to the catholic church since they think it is the enemy of reason and liberty.31
8729726531RomanticismMovement in art, music and literature that was a reaction against the classical period. Themes included emotion, supernatural, nationalism, historical themes, nature, true love (often unrequited) and death.32
8729726532ScholasticismThe system of logic, philosophy and theology of medieval university scholars includes the idea of reason and faith can be reconciled. the most famous practicitioner is St. Thomas Aquinas. It is based on the writings of Aristotle and the early Christian fathers.33
8729726533Social DarwinismThe idea that life is a struggle and only the fittest groups of people can survive.34
8729726534SocialismIdea that the government should manage the economy, or aspects of the economy for the good of the people. These people in the 19th century agreed that workers were unfairly treated, opposed competition as a principle of economic behaviors, rejected laissez-faire, and questioned the validity of the concept of private property.35
8729726535StructuralismAn intellectual movement from France in the 1960's. It asserted that phenomena of human life do no make sense except through their inter-relations.36
8729726536TotalitarianismThe organization of a state that has complete control over every aspect of the individual's life and in which the goal of the individual is to serve the state.37
8729726537UtilitarianismIdea of Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832) that the object of conduct and legislation is to achieve, "the greatest good for the greatest number." There is a strong relativist component since the morality of an action is defined by its utility: does it cause pleasure or pain? Bentham defines "good" as that which gives pleasure or stops pain and "bad" as that which gives pain.38
8729726538ZionismThe idea that Jews should have a nation in the land of Israel. First articulated by Theodor Herzl in 1896, in response to anti-Semitism, unleashed by the Dreyfus case.39

AP Psychology Disorders Flashcards

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9716795726biopsychosocial modela view of mental disorders as caused by a combination of interacting biological, psychological, and sociocultural factors0
9716795730anxiety disordera condition in which intense feelings of apprehension are long-standing and disruptive1
9716795731phobiaan anxiety disorder involving strong, irrational fear of an object or situation that does not objectively justify such a reaction2
9716795733post-traumatic stress disordera pattern of adverse reactions following a traumatic and threatening event3
9716795734social phobiaan anxiety disorder involving strong, irrational fears relating to social situations4
9716795735agoraphobiaan anxiety disorder involving strong fear of being alone or away from the security of home5
9716795736generalized anxiety disordera condition that involves relatively mild but long-lasting anxiety that is focused on any particular object or situation; also called free-floating anxiety6
9716795737panic disorderan anxiety disorder involving sudden panic attacks7
9716795738panic attacksattacks marked by intense heart palpitations, pressure or pain in the chest, dizziness or unsteadiness, sweating, and a feeling of faintness8
9716795739obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)an anxiety disorder involving repetitive thoughts and urges to perform certain rituals9
9716795740obsessionspersistent, upsetting, and unwanted thoughts10
9716795741compulsionsritualistic, repetitive behaviors11
9716795742somatoform disorderspsychological problems in which there are symptoms of a physical disorder without a physical cause12
9716795743conversion disordera somatoform disorder in which a person displays blindness, deafness, or other symptoms of sensory or motor failure without a physical cause13
9716795744hypochondriasisa somatoform disorder involving strong, unjustified fear of physical illness14
9716795747dissociative disordersrare conditions that involve sudden and usually temporary disruptions in a person's memory, consciousness, or identity15
9716795748dissociative fuguea dissociative disorder involving sudden loss of memory and the assumption of a new identity in a new locale16
9716795749dissociative amnesiaa dissociative disorder marked by a sudden loss of memory17
9716795750dissociative identity disorder (DID)a dissociative disorder in which a person reports having more than one identity; also called multiple personality disorder18
9716795752major depressive disordera mood disorder in which a person feels sad and hopeless for weeks or months19
9716795753delusionsfalse beliefs, such as those experienced by people suffering from schizophrenia or extreme depression20
9716795754dysthymic disordera mood disorder involving a pattern of comparatively mild depression that lasts for at least two years21
9716795756bipolar disordera mood disorder in which a person alternates between deep depression and mania; also called manic depression22
9716795761schizophreniaa severe and disabling pattern of disturbed thinking emotion, perception, and behavior23
9716795765hallucinationsa symptom of disorder in which people perceive voices or other stimuli when there are no stimuli present24
9716795766positive symptomsschizophrenic symptoms such as disorganized thoughts, hallucinations, and delusions25
9716795767negative symptomsschizophrenic symptoms such as absence of pleasure, lack of speech, and flat effect26
9716795768paranoid schizophreniaa form of schizophrenia characterized by delusions (of persecution or grandeur or jealousy); symptoms may include anger and anxiety and aloofness and doubts about gender identity; unlike other types of schizophrenia the patients are usually presentable and (if delusions are not acted on) may function in an apparently normal manner27
9716795770catatonic schizophreniaa form of schizophrenia characterized by a tendency to remain in a fixed stuporous state for long periods; the catatonia may give way to short periods of extreme excitement28
9716795773personality disorderslong-standing, inflexible ways of behaving that create a variety of problems29
9716795774paranoid personality disordera personality disorder characterized by suspiciousness and distrust of others, all of whom are assumed to be hostile30
9716795775schizoid personality disordera personality disorder characterized by detachment from social relationships; restricted range of emotion31
9716795777dependent personality disordera personality disorder characterized by helplessness; excessive need to be taken care of; submissive and clinging behavior; difficulty in making decisions32
9716795778obsessive-compulsive personality disordera personality disorder characterized by preoccupation with orderliness, perfection, and control33
9716795779avoidant personality disordera personality disorder characterized by inhibition in social situations; feelings of inadequacy; oversensitivity to criticism34
9716795780histrionic personality disordera personality disorder characterized by excessive emotionality and preoccupation with being the center of attention; emotional shallowness; overly dramatic behavior35
9716795781narcissistic personality disordera personality disorder characterized by exaggerated ideas of self-importance and achievements; preoccupation with fantasies of success; arrogance36
9716795782borderline personality disordera personality disorder characterized by lack of stability in interpersonal relationships, self-image, and emotion; impulsivity; angry outbursts; intense fear of abandonment; recurring suicidal gestures37
9716795783antisocial personality disordera personality disorder characterized by shameless disregard for, and violation of, other people's rights38
9716795787attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)patients diagnosed with this disorder are impulsive and unable to concentrate on an activity as well as other children their age can39
9716795791DSM-VDiagnostic and Statistical Manual; resource for diagnosing disorders40
9716795792Philippe PinelBrought about many significant and far-reaching reforms in the care and treatment of mental patients. Credited with the application of the medical model.41

AP Lit Terms Flashcards

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5442479629elegya mournful, melancholy, or plaintive poem, especially a funeral song or a lament for the dead.0
5442485140a villanellea verse form of French origin consisting of 19 lines arranged in five tercets and a quatrain. The first and third lines of the first tercet recur alternately at the end of each subsequent tercet and both together at the end of the quatrain1
5442486699an odea lyric poem typically of elaborate or irregular metrical form and expressive of exalted or enthusiastic emotion2
5442486700free versepoetry that does not rhyme or have a regular meter.3
5442489811soliloquyan utterance or discourse by a person who is talking to himself or herself or is disregardful of or oblivious to any hearers present (often used as a device in drama to disclose a character's innermost thoughts): Hamlet's soliloquy begins with "To be or not to be.".4
5442489812apostrophewhen a speaker directly addresses someone or something that isn't present in the poem. The speaker could be addressing an abstract concept like love, a person (dead or alive), a place, or even a thing, like the sun or the sea.5
5442491995synecdochea figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole or the whole for a part, the special for the general or the general for the special, as in ten sail for ten ships or a Croesus for a rich man.6
5442496882metonymya figure of speech that consists of the use of the name of one object or concept for that of another to which it is related, or of which it is a part, as "scepter" for "sovereignty," or "the bottle" for "strong drink," or "count heads (or noses)" for "count people."7
5442499429onomatopoeiathe formation of a word, as cuckoo, meow, honk, or boom, by imitation of a sound8
5442501003coupleta pair of successive lines of verse, especially a pair that rhyme and are of the same length9
5442502238spondeea foot of two syllables, both of which are long in quantitative meter or stressed in accentual meter10
5442503484iambic pentametera common meter in poetry consisting of an unrhymed line with five feet or accents, each foot containing an unaccented syllable and an accented syllable11
5442503485quatrainsa stanza or poem of four lines, usually with alternate rhymes12
5442505802enjambmentthe running on of the thought from one line, couplet, or stanza to the next without a syntactical break.13
5442505803epitaph-VWa commemorative inscription on a tomb or mortuary monument about the person buried at that site14
5442508678paradoxIt is a statement that appears to be self-contradictory or silly but may include a latent truth15
5442510424parallel structure(also called parallelism) is the repetition of a chosen grammatical form within a sentence. By making each compared item or idea in your sentence follow the same grammatical pattern, you create a parallel construction16
5442511686extended metaphora metaphor introduced and then further developed throughout all or part of a literary work, especially a poem: Robert Frost uses two roads as an extended metaphor in "The Road Not Taken."17
5442513136parodya humorous or satirical imitation of a serious piece of literature or writing18
5442514789logical fallacyan error of reasoning. When someone adopts a position, or tries to persuade someone else to adopt a position, based on a bad piece of reasoning, they commit a fallacy.19
5442516039invective- VWvehement or violent denunciation, censure, or reproach20
5442517445parablea short allegorical story designed to illustrate or teach some truth, religious principle, or moral lesson.21
5442517446jargonthe language, especially the vocabulary, peculiar to a particular trade, profession, or group22
5442519734elegiac- VWexpressing sorrow or lamentation23
5442521368didacticintended for instruction24
5442521369epigramsany witty, ingenious, or pointed saying tersely expressed25
5442523712cacophonyharsh discordance of sound; hoots, cackles, and wails.26
5442525065literary conceitis a figure of speech in which two vastly different objects are likened together with the help of similes or metaphors.27
5442527010assonancerhyme in which the same vowel sounds are used with different consonants in the stressed syllables of the rhyming words, as in penitent and reticence.28

AP Chemistry Vocabulary Flashcards

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9556175096STP Conditions0 degrees Celsius, 22.4 L0
9556175097Densitymass / volume1
9556175098Molaritymoles / L2
9556175099DistillationDepends on differences in volatility3
9556175100FiltrationSeparating a solid from a liquid4
9556175101ChromatographySeparating substances through differences in rates5
9556175102Law of conservation of massMass is neither created nor destroyed6
9556175103Dalton's Atomic TheoryEach element is made up of tiny particles called atoms. The atoms of a given element are identical. Chemical compounds are forms when atoms of different elements combine with each other. Chemical reactions involve reorganization of the atoms (changes in the way they are bound together.)7
9556175104JJ ThomsonCathode Ray, discovered the electron8
9556175105MillikanOil Drop Experiment, determined mass and magnitude of the electron9
9556175106RutherfordGold Foil Experiment, discovered nuclei, atoms have a lot of space10
9556175107Solubility RulesChlorates, Acetates, Sulfates, Halogens, Nitrates, Group IA11
9556175108Solubility Rules ExceptionsCalcium, Barium, Strontium, Mercury, Silver, Lead (Sulfates) Mercury, Silver, Lead (Halogens)12
9556175109Strong ElectrolytesGood conductors, easily ionized13
9556175110Weak ElectrolytesConduct currents very weakly14
9556175111Strong AcidsHF, HBr, HCl, HClO4, HI, HClO3, HNO315
9556175112Strong BasesAll Group IA elements with OH- Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, Ba(OH)2,16
9556175113Dilution FormulaM1V1 = M2V217
9556175114Types of Chemical ReactionsPrecipitation reactions, Acid-Base reactions, and Redox reactions18
9556175115Precipitation reactionAn insoluble substance is formed as a result of the reaction19
9556175116Spectator ionsIons that do not participate in the reaction20
9556175117Bronsted-Lowry acidProton donor21
9556175118Bronsted-Lowry baseProton acceptor22
9556175119Arrhenius acidProduces H+ (H3O+) in water23
9556175120Arrhenius baseProduces OH- in water24
9556175121Lewis acidElectron pair donor25
9556175122Lewis baseElectron pair acceptor26
9556175123Equivalence pointEnough titrant added to analyte27
9556175124EndpointIndicator changes color28
9556175125Redox reactionElectrons are transferred29
9556175126OxidationLoss of electrons (LEO)30
9556175127ReductionGain of electrons (GER)31
9556175128Oxidizing agentCauses oxidation (is often reduced)32
9556175129Reducing agentCauses reduction (is often oxidized)33
95561751301 standard atmosphere1 atm, 760 mm Hg, 760 torr, 101,325 Pa34
9556175131Pressureforce / area35
9556175132Boyle's LawP1V1 = P2V236
9556175133Charles's LawV1 / T1 = V2 / T237
9556175134Ideal Gas LawPV = nRT38
9556175135Molar mass of a gasdRT / P39
9556175136Dalton's law of partial pressuresPtot = P1 + P2 + P3...40
9556175137Mole fractionn1 / ntot41
9556175138KMTVolume of individual particles is negligible Particles are in constant motion Particles exert no forces on each other Collisions of particles with container walls are cause of pressure from gas42
9556175139Root mean square velocityAverage velocity of gas particles43
9556175140DiffusionMixing of gases44
9556175141EffusionGas into a vacuum45
9556175341Graham's law of effusion46
9556175142Law of conservation of energyEnergy can be converted but never destroyed47
9556175143Potential energyEnergy from position or composition48
9556175144Kinetic energyEnergy from motion49
9556175145HeatTransfer of energy with temperature50
9556175146WorkForce acting over a distance51
9556175147ExothermicEnergy out of the system52
9556175148EndothermicEnergy into the system53
9556175149First law of thermodynamicsThe energy of the universe is constant54
9556175150Internal energy (delta E)delta E = q + w55
9556175151Enthalpy (delta H)delta H = delta E + P(delta V)56
9556175152Heat capacityheat absorbed / increase in temperature57
9556175153Calorimetry equationq = mCAT58
9556175154Hess's Law RulesIf a reaction is reversed, the sign of delta H is reversed delta H is proportional to the quantities of reactions and products59
9556175155Standard enthalpy of formationchange in enthalpy with formation of one mole of compound from its elements60
9556175156Change in enthalpy for reactionsum of heat of formations of products - sum of heat of formations of reactions61
9556175157Wavelengthdistance between two peaks or troughs in a wave62
9556175158Frequencynumber of cycles per second63
9556175159Basic wave equationspeed of light = wavelength x frequency64
9556175160Energy of a photon equationPlanck's constant x speed of light / frequency65
9556175161Photoelectric effectEffect occurring when electrons are emitted from the surface of a metal when light strikes it66
9556175162Dual nature of lightLight acts as a wave and as particulate matter67
9556175163de Broglie's equationWavelength of a particle68
9556175164DiffractionLight is scattered from points or lines69
9556175165Types of electromagnetic radiation (smallest to largest)gamma, X-rays, UV, visible, IR, micro, radio70
9556175166Types of electromagnetic radiation (largest to smallest)radio, micro, IR, visible, UV, X-rays, gamma71
9556175167Heisenberg Uncertainty PrincipleWe cannot know both the position and momentum of an electron (the more we know one, the less we know the other)72
9556175168Pauli exclusion principleElectrons with the same spin cannot occupy the same space73
9556175169Aufbau principlefill in order of increasing energy74
9556175170Hund's ruleeach orbital must have 1 e- before it can have another75
9556175171Ionization energyEnergy required to remove a valence electron from an atom76
9556175172Electron affinityEnergy change associated with the addition of an electron to a gaseous atom77
9556175173Atomic radius trendDecreases across a period (more effective nuclear charge), increases down a group (more electron shielding)78
9556175174Ionization energy trendIncreases across a period (electron shielding not complete), decreases down a group (more electron shielding)79
9556175175Coulomb's lawEnergy of interaction between a pair of ions80
9556175176Bond energyEnergy needed to break bond81
9556175177Covalent bondingElectrons are shared by nuclei82
9556175178ElectronegativityAbility of an atom in a molecule to attract shared electrons to itself83
9556175179Dipolar or dipole momentHas center of positive and center of negative charge84
9556175180Lattice energyChange in energy when separated gas ions form an ionic solid Equation: LE = k(Q1Q2 / r) k is proportionality constant, Q is charge of ions, r is shortest distance between centers of ions85
9556175181Localized electron modelMolecule is composed of atoms bound together by sharing pairs of electrons86
9556175182Lone pairsPairs of electrons localized87
9556175183Localized electron model partsLewis diagram, VSEPR model (geometry), type of atomic orbitals88
9556175184ResonanceMore than one valid Lewis structure89
9556175185Bond angle of a linear shape?18090
9556175186Hybridization of a linear shape?sp91
9556175187Number of bonds in a linear shape?292
9556175188Name of a linear shape?MX293
9556175189Bond angle of a trigonal planar shape?12094
9556175190Hybridization of a trigonal planar shape?sp295
9556175191Number of bonds in a trigonal planar shape?396
9556175192Name of a trigonal planar shape?MX397
9556175193Bond angle of a bent shape?<12098
9556175194Hybridization of a bent shape?sp299
9556175195Number of bonds in a bent shape?2100
9556175196Number of nonbonding pairs in a bent shape?1101
9556175197Bond angle of a tetrahedral shape?109.5102
9556175198Hybridization of a tetrahedral shape?sp3103
9556175199Number of bonds in a tetrahedral shape?4104
9556175200Name of a tetrahedral shape?MX4105
9556175201Bond angle of a trigonal pyramidal shape?<109.5106
9556175202Hybridization of a trigonal pyramidal shape?sp3107
9556175203Number of bonds in a trigonal pyramidal shape?3108
9556175204Number of nonbonding pairs in a trigonal pyramidal shape?1109
9556175205Name of a trigonal pyramidal shape?asily ionizedMX3110
9556175206Bond angle of a V shape?<109.5111
9556175207Hybridization of a V shape?sp3112
9556175208Number of a bonds in a V shape?2113
9556175209Number of nonbonding pairs in a V shape?2114
9556175210Name of a V shape?M2X115
9556175211Bond angles of a trigonal bipyramidal shape?120, 90116
9556175212Hybridization of a trigonal bipyramidal shape?sp3d117
9556175213Number of bonds in a trigonal bipyramidal shape?5118
9556175214Name of a trigonal bipyramidal shape?MX5119
9556175215Bond angle of a see-saw shape?<120, <90120
9556175216Hybridization of a see-saw shape?sp3d121
9556175217Number of bonds in a see-saw shape?4122
9556175218Number of nonbonding pairs in a see-saw shape?1123
9556175219Bond angle of a T-shape?<90124
9556175220Hybridization of a T-shape?sp3d125
9556175221Number of bonds in a T-shape?3126
9556175222Number of nonbonding pairs in a T-shape?2127
9556175223Bond angle of a linear (2) shape?180128
9556175224Hybridization of a linear (2) shape?sp3d129
9556175225Number of bonds in a linear (2) shape?2130
9556175226Number of nonbonding pairs in a linear (2) shape?3131
9556175227Bond angle of an octahedron?90132
9556175228Hybridization of an octahedron?sp3d2133
9556175229Number of bonds in an octahedron?6134
9556175230Name of an octahedron?MX6135
9556175231Bond angle of a square pyramidal shape?<90136
9556175232Hybridization of a square pyramidal shape?sp3d2137
9556175233Number of bonds in a square pyramidal shape?5138
9556175234Number of nonbonding pairs in a square pyramidal shape?1139
9556175235Name of a square pyramidal shape?MX5140
9556175236Bond angle of a square planar shape?90141
9556175237Hybridization of a square planar shape?sp3d2142
9556175238Number of bonds in a square planar shape?4143
9556175239Number of nonbonding pair in a square planar shape?2144
9556175240Name of a square planar shape?MX4145
9556175241Metallic bondDelocalized electron146
9556175242Nonpolar covalent bondEqual sharing of electrons147
9556175243Polar covalent bondUnequal sharing of electrons148
9556175244Ionic bondTransfer of electrons149
9556175245Electronegativity differencesNonpolar covalent (0-0.4), polar covalent (0.4-1.67), ionic (above 1.67)150
9556175246Sigma bondBond between the s orbitals151
9556175247Pi bondBond between the p orbitals152
9556175248Hydrogen bondSpecial type of dipole, hydrogen with N, F, or O atom153
9556175249London dispersion forcesBetween non polar molecules154
9556175250AlloyContains a mixture of elements and has metallic properties155
9556175251Substitutional alloyMetal atoms replaced by metal atoms of same size156
9556175252Interstitial alloySmall atoms in holes157
9556175253Vapor pressurePressure of vapor at equilibrium158
9556175254Vapor pressure formula (Hg column)Patmosphere = Pvapor +Pmercury column159
9556175255Temperature and vapor pressure?Vapor pressure increases significantly with temperature160
9556175256IMFs and vapor pressure?High IMFs --> low vapor pressure, Low IMFs --> high vapor pressure161
9556175257Crystalline solidsComponents organized in a lattice162
9556175258Amorphous solidsComponents frozen in place with no arrangement163
9556175259Heat of fusionEnthalpy change which occurs at the melting point when a solid melts164
9556175260SublimationSolid directly to gas165
9556175261Triple pointWhere all three states exist166
9556175262Critical temperatureTemperature above which vapor cannot be liquefied no matter the pressure167
9556175263Critical pressurePressure required to produce liquefaction at the critical temperature168
9556175264Critical pointCritical temperature and critical point169
9556175265Phase diagramRepresentation of phases of a substance170
9556175266Heat of solutionEnthalpy change formation of a solution, sum of enthalpy values from each step171
9556175267Positive delta HEnergy absorbed172
9556175268Negative delta HEnergy released173
9556175269Pressure and solubilityIncreases solubility of a gas174
9556175270Henry's LawAmount of gas dissolved proportional to pressure of gas above solution175
9556175271Temperature and solubilityIncreases solubility of solid, decreases solubility of gases176
9556175272Raoult's LawNonvolatile solute simply dilutes the solvent177
9556175273Negative deviation from Raoult's lawMore IMFs, lower vapor pressure178
9556175274Positive deviation from Raoult's lawLess IMFs, more molecules escape, higher vapor pressure179
9556175275Colligative propertiesFreezing point depression, boiling point elevation, osmotic pressure180
9556175276Tyndall effectScattering of light by particles181
9556175277ColloidSuspension of particles182
9556175278CoagulationDestruction of colloid by heating or adding electrolyte183
9556175279Reaction rateChange of concentration over time (Rate = delta [A] / delta t)184
9556175280Rate lawRate depends on concentration185
9556175281Integrated rate lawConcentrations depends on time186
9556175282Initial rateInstantaneous rate after reaction begins187
9556175283CatalystIncreases rate of reaction but not consumed188
9556175284Surface area and rateMore surface area increases rate189
9556175285Temperature and rateHigher temperature increases rate190
9556175286Zeroth order rate lawRate = k191
9556175287Zeroth order integrated rate law[A] = -kt + [A]0192
9556175288Zeroth order plot[A] vs. t193
9556175289Zeroth order slopeSlope = -k194
9556175290Zeroth order half lifet1/2 = [A]0 / 2k195
9556175291First order rate lawRate = k[A]196
9556175292First order integrated rate lawln[A] = - kt + ln[A]0197
9556175293First order plotln[A] vs. t198
9556175294First order slopeSlope = -k199
9556175295First order half lifet1/2 = 0.693 / k200
9556175296Second order rate lawRate = k[A]2201
9556175297Second order integrated rate law1/[A] = kt + 1/[A]0202
9556175298Second order plot1/[A] vs. t203
9556175299Second order slopeSlope = k204
9556175300Second order half lifet1/2 = 1 / k[A]0205
9556175301Reaction mechanismSeries of steps206
9556175302A --> productsRate = k[A]207
9556175303A + A --> productsRate = k[A]2208
9556175304A + B --> productsRate = k[A][B]209
9556175305A + A + B --> productsRate = k[A]2[B]210
9556175306A + B + C --> productsRate = k[A][B][C]211
9556175307Rate determining stepSlowest step212
9556175308Reaction mechanism requirementsSum must give balanced equation, mechanism must agree with rate law213
9556175309Equilibrium expressionProducts raised to coeffs over reactants raised to coeffs214
9556175310Q = kEquilibrium, no shift215
9556175311Q > kShift to reactants216
9556175312Q < kShift to products217
9556175313Le Chatlier's PrincipleChange imposed, equilibrium shifts to lessen change218
9556175314More product addedShift to reactants219
9556175315More reactant addedShift to product220
9556175316How to change the pressure of a reaction system?Add or remove gas, add an inert gas, change volume221
9556175317KaAcid dissociation constant222
9556175318Strong acidEquilibrium is far to the right, has weak conjugate base223
9556175319Weak acidEquilibrium is far to the left224
9556175320Monoprotic acidsOne acidic proton225
9556175321AmphotericCan behave as an acid or a base (water)226
9556175322KwWater dissociation constant227
9556175323pH-log[H+]228
9556175324pOH-log[OH-]229
9556175325pK-logK230
9556175326pH of strong acidsDepends on concentration of H+ ions231
9556175327pH of weak acidsFind Ka and use an ice chart232
9556175328Percent dissociationAmount dissociated M / initial concentration M x 100%233
9556175329Polyprotic acidsDissociates in a stepwise manner, find Ka of each step234
9556175330Bond strength and acid strengthLess bond strength, more acid strength235
9556175331Common ion effectShift in equilibrium because of addition of common ion236
9556175332BufferResists a change in pH237
9556175333Henderson Hasselbach EquationUsed to find the pH of a buffer238
9556175334Strong acid-strong base titration curveEquivalence point is 7239
9556175335Weak acid-strong base titration curveEquivalence point is greater than 7, has a halfway equivalence point240
9556175336Acid-base indicatorChanges color at the end point (not same as equivalence point)241
9556175337pH of indicatorKa/[H+] = [In-]/[HIn] = 1/10, ratio reversed for bases242
9556175338KspSolubility product243
9556185984Avogadro's Number6.022 x 10^23, number of particles in a mole of a pure substance244
9556222985Ionsame number of protons + neutrons, different e- number245
9556227504anionnegatively charged ion (more electrons than protons)246
9556229613cationpositively charged ion (more protons than electrons)247
9556240988Mendelev and Meyercreators of the periodic table248
9556247932Dalton's discoveries-atoms go to "elements -elements go to molecules -compounds have constant ratio249
9556253770substanceeither a molecule or compound, both can be called this250
9556275358compoundname of ionic bonded substances251
9556279437moleculecovalent bonded substances252
9556281740ionic bond- transfer of electrons - typically nonmetal + metal - held together by electrostatic forces - high melting and boiling points253
9556297821stablelower energy =254
9556302616interstitial alloymetal atoms with two vastly different radii combine255
9556305501substitutional alloyforms with atoms of similar radii256
9556310091sigma bondfirst covalent bond formed between two atoms257
9556314501pi bondadditional bonds beyond the sigma258

Ecology Intro AP BIO Flashcards

Population ecology, human population growth community ecology, co-evolution, ecological succession, ecosystems, biogeochemical cycles, biomes, and human impact on the biosphere.

Terms : Hide Images
6421861747PopulationA group of individuals of the same species living in the same area.0
6421861748CommunityA group of populations living in the same area.1
6421861749EcosystemThe interrelationships between the organisms in a community and their physical environment.2
6421861750BiosphereIt includes all the regions of the earth that contain living things.3
6421861751HabitatThe type of place where it usually lives. It includes the other organisms that live there as well as the physical and chemical characteristics of the environment.4
6421861752Carrying CapacityThe maximum number of individuals of a population that can be sustained by a particular habitat.5
6421861753Limiting FactorsElements that prevent a population from attaining its biotic potential.6
6421861754Abiotic Factorsfactors are the non-living parts of an organism's habitat. Soil, Water, Air, Temperature, and Sunlight.7
6421861755Biotic FactorsThe living parts of an ecosystem. Usually include: producer, consumers, decomposers, and human influence.8
6421861756MutualismA relationship between two species in which both species benefit.9
6421861757Primary ProducersThey convert solar energy into a form that can be used by the rest of the community. Aka autotrophs.10
6421861758HeterotrophsSpecies that obtain energy by breaking apart organic compounds that have been assembled by other organisms. (Herbivores)11
6421861759Primary ConsumersHeterotrophs that dine on primary producers... aka herbivores.12
6421861760Secondary ConsumersPrimary carnivores... those that consume herbivores.13
6421861761Tertiary ConsumersThose that consume secondary consumers14
6421861762Trophic LevelsThe feeding positions: primary producers and primary, secondary, and tertiary consumers. A group of organisms united by obtaining their energy from the same part of the food web.15
6421861763OmnivoresThey feed on both plants and animals. (feed from multiple trophic levels.)16
6421861764DecomposersFeed on waste products or dead bodies of organisms... Largely responsible for the recycling of materials within ecosystems. They break down organic matter into inorganic components that primary producers can absorb.17
6421861765commensalismA symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits and the other is unaffected18
6421861766ParasitismA symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits and the other is harmed19
6421861767HerbivoresConsumers that eat only plants20
6421861768CarnivoresConsumers that eat only animals21
6421861769transpirationevaporation of water from a plant22

German AP Exam Vocabulary Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5165301765summarydie Übersicht, die Zusammensetzung0
5165301766skimüberfliegen (den Text/die Fragen überfliegen)1
5165301767sourcedie Quelle2
5165301768according to source 1laut Quelle 1 (lt. Quelle 1)3
5165301769observationdie Beobachtung4
5165301770experiencedie Erfahrung5
5165301771to differsich unterscheiden6
5165301772differenceder Unterschied7
5165301773commongemeinsam8
5165301774to compare, to contrastvergleichen9
5165301775comparisonder Vergleich10
5165301776strengthdie Stärke11
5165301777weaknessdie Schwäche12
5165301778advantageder Vorteil13
5165301779disadvantageder Nachteil14
5165301780originallyursprünglich15
5165301781the original articleder ursprüngliche Artikel16
5165301782to publishveröffentlichen17
5165301783was publishedwurde veröffentlicht18
5165301784order from a catalogdie Katalogbestellung19
5165301785addie Anzeige20
5165301786advertisementdie Werbung21
5165301787statisticdie Statistik22
5165301788selectiondie Auswahl23
5165301789invention , a new inventiondie Erfindung, eine neue Erfindung24
5165301790GPSdas Navi (Navigationssystem)25
5165301791companydas Unternehmen, die Firma, der Betrieb26
5165301792managerder Leiter, der Manager27
5165301793circumlocutiondie Umschreibung28
5165301794adviceder Rat29
5165301795suggestionder Vorschlag30
5165301796to convinceüberzeugen31
5165301797conversationdas Gespräch32
5165301798less thanweniger als33
5165301799mostam meisten34
5165301800answer sheetder Antwortbogen35
5165301801to explainerklären36
5165301802presentationder Vortrag37
5165301803to presentvortragen, präsentieren38
5165301804to ask questions and respondFragen stellen und beantworten39
5165301805to lead a conversationein Gespräch führen40
5165301806to discussdiskutieren (über + Akk)41
5165301807to analyzeanalysieren42
5165301808to have same opinion, to agreeübereinstimmen43
5165301809to quotezitieren44
5165301810in my opinionmeiner Meinung nach45
5165301811I supposeIch nehme an46
5165301812to come to a conclusionzu einem Ergebnis kommen47
5165301813evidenceder Beweis48
5165301814to mentionerwähnen49
5165301815neither...nor...weder...noch...50
5165301816both...and...sowohl...als auch...51
5165301817effectiveeffektvoll52
5165301818slogandas Schlagwort53
5165301819to quotezitieren54
5165301820creativekreativ, schöpferisch55
5165301821informationdie Auskunft, die Information56
5165301822from my point of viewaus meiner Sicht/Perspektive57
5165301823backgroundder Hintergrund58
5165301824introductiondie Einleitung59
5165301825contentder Inhalt60
5165301826text analysisdie Textanalyse61
5165301827to comprehendbegreifen62
5165301828on one hand...on the other hand...einerseits...andererseits....63
5165301829I agree with...Ich stimme mit...überein64
5165301830I cannot agree withIch kann nicht zustimmen65
5165301831It seems obvious thatEs scheint offensichtlich, dass66
5165301832My impression of the text isMein Eindruck vom Text ist67
5165301833etc.usw. (und so weiter)68
5165301834extensiveumfangreich69
5165301835importantbedeutend, wichtig70
5165301836strangeeigenartig71
5165301837headlinedie Schlagzeile72
5165301838to take a position, to give one's opinion/view, to comment on somethingStellung nehmen73
5165301839to play a roleeine Rolle spielen74
5165301840reason, reasonsder Grund, die Gründe75
5165301841to rise, climbsteigen76
5165301842valueder Wert77
5166600539to decreaseabnehmen78
5166602750paragraphder Absatz79
5166606894to acceptakzeptieren80
5166606895die Anfrage81
5166609814purposedie Angabe82
5166611617the code, the offerdas Angebot83
5166611618opiniondie Auffassung84
5166619204essayder Aufsatz85
5166621071informationdie Auskunft86
5166622985forecastdie Ausschnitt87
5166624799to selectauswählen88
5166630226awardedauszeichnen89
5166635578the excerptder Auszug90
5166639346to thankbedanken, sich91
5166640800to meanbedeuten92
5166640801to influencebeeinflussen93
5166643398to questionbefragen94
5166647111to describebeschreiben95
5166649015to talk aboutbesprechen96
5166649016to preferbevorzugen97
5166651871to be askedbitten, Sie werden gebeten98
5167037144circaca.99
5166656741characteristicdie Charakteristik100
5166659264reccomendationdie Empfehlung101
5166659285to decideentschneiden102
5166662751to realizefestellen103
5166666789functiondie Funktion104
5166668594area, surroundingdas Gebiet105
5166668595the customder Gebrauch106
5166671367to have something in commonetwas gemeinsam haben107
5166671368the devicedas Gerät108
5166675258graphicdie Grafik109
5166677873the reasonder Grund110
5166680478handeln von111
5166680479mainlyhauptsächlich112
5166682466to find outherausfinden113
5166684462listening textder Hörtext114
5166684463to be interested insich interessieren für115
5166690949to concentratesich konzentrieren116
5166699345according tolaut117
5166694895apprenticeshipdie Lehrstelle118
5166696822opiniondie Meinung119
5166696840surveydie Nachfrage120
5166699346aboveobig121
5166702389Perspectivedie Perspektive122
5166702390pointder Punkt123
5166704335resourcedas Quellenmaterial124
5166704336adviceder Ratschlag125
5166707591to reactreagieren126
5166709174the reviewder Rückblick127
5166710823radioder Rundfunk128
5166712788to come to a conclusionSchluss, zum S. kommen129
5166712789sequencedie Sequenz130
5166715381bullet pointder Stichpunkt131
5166715382styleder Stil132
5166717220textder Text133
5166717221themedas Thema134
5166717222to skimüberfliegen135
5166720075overviewdie Übersicht136
5166728610surveydie Umfrage137
5166728611area, surroundingsdie Umgebung138
5166732373to go around somethingumgehen, um etwas gehen139
5166732374independentunabhängig140
5166734099the companydas Unternehmen141
5166738569selectwählen142
5166757872probablywahrscheinlich143
5166757873to increasezunehmen144
5166763432to summarizezusammenfassen145
5166763433to put something togetherzusammenstellen146
5166765156purposeder Zweck147

AP Gov Ch. 14 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
9503141292clear and present danger testA test established that defines the point at which speech loses the protection of the First Amendment.0
9503141293due process14th amendment clause stating that no state may deprive a person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law1
9503141294establishment clausethe First Amendment guarantees that the government will not create and support an official state church2
9503141295exclusionary rulea rule that provides that otherwise admissible evidence cannot be used in a criminal trial if it was the result of illegal police conduct3
9503141296Fifth AmendmentRights in Criminal Cases (Self-incrimination, Double Jeopardy, Due Process, Just Compensation for Eminent Domain) *grants due process in federal cases4
9503141297free exercise clausethe First Amendment guarantee that citizens may freely engage in the religious activities of their choice5
9503141298libela tort consisting of false and malicious publication printed for the purpose of defaming a living person6
9503141299obscene speechQuality or state of a work that taken as a whole appeals to a prurient interest in sex by depicting sexual conduct in a patently offensive way and that lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.7
9503141300prior restraintA government preventing material from being published. This is a common method of limiting the press in some nations, but it is usually unconstitutional in the United States, according to the First Amendment and as confirmed in the 1931 Supreme Court case of Near v. Minnesota.8
9503141301procedural due processConstitutional requirement that governments proceed by proper methods; limits how government may exercise power.9
9503141302right to privacyright to be free of unsanctioned intrusion10
9503141303search and seizureobtaining evidence in a haphazard or random manner, a practice prohibited by the 4th amendment; probable cause and a search warrant are required for this to be legal11
9503141304selective incorporationThe process by which provisions of the Bill of Rights are brought within the scope of the Fourteenth Amendment and so applied to state and local governments12
9503141305substantive due processConstitutional requirement that governments act reasonably and that the substance of the laws themselves be fair and reasonable; limits what a government may do.13
9503141306symbolic speechnonverbal communication, such as burning a flag or wearing an armband. The Supreme Court has accorded some symbolic speech protection under the first amendment.14
9503141307wall of separationAn interpretation of the establishment clause embraced by the Supreme Court that allows no government involvement with religion, even on a non preferential basis.15
9503141308Barron v. Baltimore (1833)Supreme Court decision that determined that the states are not bound to follow the Bill of Rights16
9503141309Bethel Schools v. Fraser (1986)Supreme Court decision that determined that schools can justifiably punish students for using inappropriate language during school functions and not be in violation of their 1st Amendment rights17
9503141310Engle v. Vitale (1962)Government-sponsored prayer in public schools is a violation of the 1st Amendment's Establishment Clause even if the prayer does not favor a particular religion and students are allowed to remain silent during its reading18
9503141311Gideon v. Wainwright (1963)Applies the 6th Amendment right to counsel to state courts via the due process clause of the 14th Amendment19
9503141312Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)A Connecticut law banning birth control was deemed unconstitutional. While not explicitly stated in the Constitution, the Court determined that privacy was implied in the Constitution via other constitutional protections such as the 5th Amendment protections against self-incrimination20
9503141313Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971)Established the 3 part Lemon test for the Establishment clause which states the law...(1) Must have a legitimate secular purpose...(2)...Must not have the primary effect of either advancing or inhibiting religion...(3)...Must not result in an excessive entanglement of government and religion21
9503141314Mapp v. Ohio (1961)Incorporates the "exclusionary rule" provision of the 4th Amendment via use of the 14th Amendment's Due Process Clause22
9503141315Miller v. California (1973)Supreme Court decision that denied a 1st Amendment Freedom of Speech obscenity conviction on the grounds that speech can be banned if it is considered to lack serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value....("SLAPS test")23
9503141316Miranda v. Arizona (1966)Supreme Court decision that declared detained suspects must be read a series of rights (such as the right to remain silent) prior to being questioned by police24
9503141317New Jersey v. TLO (1985)Supreme Court decision that declared while searches by school administrators are protected under the 4th Amendment, searches conducted while acting on "reasonable suspicion" as opposed to "probable cause" are permissible25
9503141318Roe v. Wade (1973)Supreme Court decision that protects a woman's decision to abort a pregnancy through the right to privacy implied via the 14th Amendment Due Process Clause. A balancing test was created in that a state's compelling interest to ban an abortion becomes stronger as a woman's pregnancy continues.26
9503141319Schenck v. United States (1919)Encouraging people not to register for the WWI military draft is not protected speech under the 1st Amendment because it creates a "clear and present danger" to the recruitment of U.S. forces during war. Thus, the "clear and present danger" precedent was established.27
9503141320Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Schools (1969)The 1st Amendment protection of freedom of speech (in this case symbolic speech) is applied to schools via the 14th Amendment. In this case a school could not ban a student wearing a black armband to school to protest the Vietnam War, since it was not considered a substantial distraction to the learning environment.28
950318893714th Amendmentdefining national citizenship and forbidding the states to restrict the basic rights of citizens or other persons.29

AP Gov Chapter 10 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
8598429453Caucusa meeting of party followers in which party delegates are selected0
8598429454momentumwhen a candidate wins (especially an upset win), he tends to do better than expected in future contests. Sometimes also called the bandwagon effect1
8598429455retrospective votingvoting for a candidate because you like his or her past actions in office2
8598429456prospective votingvoting for a candidate because you favor his or her ideas for handling issues3
8598429457valence issuesan issue on which everyone agree, but the question is whether or not the candidate embraces that view4
8598429458positional issuesan issue in which rival candidates have opposing views but that also divides the voters5
8598429459incumbentthe person already holding an elective office6
8598429460incumbency advantagethe tendency of incumbents to do better than otherwise similar challengers, especially in congressional elections7
8598429461gerrymanderingdrawing the boundaries of legislative districts in bizarre or unusual shapes to favor one party8
8598429462surge and declinetendency for the president's party to do better in presidential years when he is at the top pf the ticket (surge), but do worse when he is not because many voters are less enthusiastic and stay home (decline)9
8598429463coattailsthe alleged tendency of candidates to win more votes in an election because of the top of the ticket of a better-known candidate, such as the president10
8598429464political action committees (PACs)committee set up by a corporation, labor union, or interest group that raises and spends campaign money from voluntary donations.11
8598429465independent expendituresspending by political action committees, corporations, or labor unions to help a party or candidate but done independently of them12
8598429466soft moneyfunds obtained by political parties that are spent on party activities such as get out the vote drives, but not on behalf of a specific candidate13
8598429467527 organizationsorganizations under section 527 of the international revenue code that raise and spend money to advance political causes14
8598429468super PACsa group that raises and send unlimited amounts of money from corporations, unions, and individuals but cannot coordinate it's activities with campaigns in any way15

Ap Biology Chapter 20 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
6151708666Recombinant DNANucleotide sequences from two ifferent sources are combined in vitro into the same DNA molecule0
6151716308Genetic engineeringThe direct manipulation of genes for practical purposes1
6151718854BiotechnologyThe manipulation of organisms of their genetic components to make useful products2
6151724403PlasmidsSmall circular DNA molecules that replicate separately from the bacterial chromosome3
6151731628Gene cloningInvolves using bacteria to make multiple copies of a gene4
6151742408Restriction enzymesEnzymes that cut DNA molecules at specific DNA sequences5
6151748748Restriction fragmentsThe fragments of DNA that are produced from restriction enzymes6
6151754276DNA ligaseAn enzyme that seals the bonds between restriction fragments7
6151758805Cloning vectorThe original plasmid used in gene cloning8
6151767803Genomic libraryThe collection of recombinant vector cones produced by cloning DNA fragments from an entire genome9
6151777634Bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC)A large plasmid that has been trimmed down and can carry a large DNA insert10
6151790243Complimentary DNA (cDNA)A library that is made by cloning DNA made in vitro by reverse transcription of all the mRNA produced by a particular cell and only represents a part of the genome11
6151813686Nucleic acid hybridizationThe process that allows researchers to identify a gene of interest12
6151843586Yeast artificial chromosomes (YAC)A host cell that avoids gene expression13
6151852698ElectroporationA method to introduce recombinant DNA into eukaryotic cells by applying a brief electrical pulse to create temporary holes in plasma membranes14
6151872413Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)A way to produce many copies of a specific target segment of DNA15
6151882714Gel electrophoresisA method of rapidly analyzing and comparing genomes16
6151887835Southern blottingA technique that combines gel electrophoresis of DNA fragments with nucleic acid hybridization17
6151900391Northern blottingA technique that combines gel electrophoresis of mRNA followed by hybridization with a probe on a membrane18
6151916664DNA microarray assaysCompare patterns of gene expression in different tissues, at different times, or under different conditions19
6151924589In vitro mutagenesisMutations are introduced into a clonedd gene, altering or destroying its function20
6151933353TotipotentA cell that can generate a complete new organism21
6151939605RNA interference (RNAi)A way that gene expression is silenced by synthetic double stranded RNA molecules matching the sequence of a particular gene22
6151955485Stem cellsA relatively unspecialized cell that can reproduce itself indefinitely and differentiate into specialized cells of one or more types23
6151973334Single nucleotide polymorphins (SNPs)Single base-pair sites that vary in a population24
6151989108Gene therapyThe alteration of an afflicted individual's genes25
6151994973Transgenic animalsWhen genes from one species is introduced into the genome of another animal26
6152003833Genetic profileAn individual's unique DNA sequence27
6152009617Short tandem repeats (STRs)Variations in the number of repeats of specific DNA sequences28
6152017571Ti plasmidThe most commonly used vector for introducing new genes into plant cells29
6152024846Genetically modified organisms (GMOs)An organism whose genetic material has been altered through some genetic engineering technology or technique30

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