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AP English Language Flashcards

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6755606231adageA saying or proverb containing a truth based on experience and often couched in metaphorical language.0
6755611110allegoryA story in which a second meaning is to be read beneath the surface.1
6755613906allusionA reference to a person, place, or event meant to create an effect or enhance the meaning of an idea.2
6755613907ambiguityA vagueness of meaning; a conscious lack of clarity meant to evoke multiple meanings or interpretations.3
6755616334anachronismA person, scene, event or other element that fails to correspond with the appropriate time or era.4
6755616335analogyA comparison that points out similarities between two dissimilar things; a passage that points out several similarities between two unlike things is called an extended analogy.5
6755619953anecdoteA brief explanation, summary, or evaluation of a text or work of literature.6
6755622469antecedentA word to which a pronoun refers.7
6755626337aphorismA short, pithy statement of a generally accepted truth or sentiment.8
6755626338ApollonianIn contrast to Bionysian, it refers to the most noble, godlike qualities of human nature and behavior.9
6755628684apostropheA locution that addresses a person or personified thing not present.10
6755628685arch(adj.) Characterized by clever or sly humor, often saucy, playful, and somewhat irreverent.11
6755628686archetypeAn abstract or ideal conception of a type; a perfectly typical example; an original model or form.12
6755633896bathosInsincere or overdone sentimentality.13
6755638014bombastInflated, pretentious language.14
6777564389burlesqueA work of literature meant to ridicule a subject; a grotesque imitation.15
6777566336cacophonyGrating, inharmonious sounds.16
6777569803canonThe works considered the most important in a national literature or period; works widely read and studied.17
6777571169circumlocutionLiterally, "talking around" a subject; i.e., discourse that avoids direct reference to a subject.18
6777576159classical, classicismDeriving from the orderly qualities of ancient Greek and Roman culture; implies formality, objectivity, simplicity, and restraint.19
6777578317clauseA structural element of a sentence, consisting of a grammatical subject and a predicate.20
6777582736independent clausessometimes called main clauses, ay stand on their own as complete sentences21
6777584392dependent clausesare used as nouns or modifiers, are incomplete sentences and cannot stand alone grammatically; they are sometimes called subordinate clauses; those that function as adjectives, nouns, or adverbs are known, respectively, as adjective, noun, and adverbial clauses22
6777586282conceitA witty or ingenious thought; a diverting or highly fanciful idea, often stated in figurative language.23
6777589271consonanceThe repetition of two or more consonant sounds in a group of words or a unit of speech or writing.24
6777591921cynicOne who expects and observes nothing but the worst of human conduct.25
6777594350deductive reasoningA method of reasoning by which specific definitions, conclusions, and theorems are drawn from general principles.26
6777596319dénouementThe resolution that occurs at the end of a narrative or drama, real or imagined.27
6777600915deus ex machinaIn literature, the use of an artificial device or gimmick to solve a problem.28
6777602481didacticHaving an instructive purpose; intending to convey information or teach a lesson, usually in a dry, pompous manner.29
6777604405DionysianAs distinguished from Apollonian, the word refers to sensual, pleasure-seeking, impulses.30
6777606139dramatic ironyA circumstance in which the audience or reader knows more about a situation than a character.31
6777607957elliptical constructionA sentence containing a deliberate omission of words.32
6777612654epigramA concise but ingenious, witty, and thoughtful statement.33
6777616570epithetAn adjective or phrase that expresses a striking quality of a person or thing; Can also be used to apply to vulgar or profane exclamations.34
6777622708eponymousA term for the title character of a work of literature.35
6777779474ethosA speaker or one's authority to express opinions on a subject.36
6777620213euphonyPleasing, harmonious sounds.37
6777634047exegesisA detailed analysis or interpretation of a work of prose or poetry.38
6777790310explicationThe interpretation or analysis of a text.39
6777792407exposéA factual piece of writing that reveals weaknesses, faults, frailties, or other shortcomings.40
6777797678expositionThe background and events that lead to the presentation of the main idea or purpose of an essay or other work; setting forth the meaning or purpose of a piece of writing or discourse.41
6777802279fallacy, fallacious reasoningAn incorrect belief or supposition based on faulty data, defective evidence, false information, or flawed logic.42
6777803642farceA comedy that contains an extravagant and nonsensical disregard of seriousness, although it may have a serious, scornful purpose.43
6777805286frameA structure that provides a premise or setting for a narrative or other discourse.44
6777806759harangueA forceful sermon, lecture, or tirade.45
6777808677homilyA lecture or sermon on a religious or moral theme meant to guide human behavior.46
6777810335hubrisExcessive pride that often affects tone.47
6777811929humanismA belief that emphasizes faith and optimism in human potential and creativity.48
6777813886hyperboleOverstatement; gross exaggeration for rhetorical effect.49
6777815700idyllA lyric poem or passage that describes a kind of ideal life or place.50
6777817607indirect quotationA rendering of a quotation in which actual words are not stated but only approximated or paraphrased.51
6777819220inductive reasoningA method of reasoning in which a number of specific facts or examples are used to make a generalization.52
6777820430invectiveA direct verbal assault; a denunciation; casting blame on someone or something.53
6777823175kenningA device employed in Anglo-Saxon poetry in which the name of a thing is replaced by one of its functions or qualities.54
6777825151lampoonA mocking, satirical assault on a person or situation.55
6777826042litotesA form of understatement in which the negative of the contrary is used to achieve emphasis or intensity.56
6777828000logosThe logic used by a speaker or writer to support a claim or point of view.57
6777831209loose sentenceA sentence that follows the customary word order of English sentences, i.e., subject-verb-objects. The main idea of the sentence is presented first and is then followed by one or more subordinate clauses.58
6777832913lyrical prosePersonal, reflective prose that reveals the speaker's thoughts and feelings about the subject.59
6777834630maximA saying or proverb expressing common wisdom or truth.60
6777840716metaphysicalA term describing poetry that uses elaborate conceits, expresses the complexities of love and life, and is highly intellectual. More generally, it refers to ideas that are neither analytical nor subject to empirical verification; that is, ideas that express an attitude about which rational argument is impossible.61
6777842158metonymyA figure of speech that uses the name of one thing to represent something else with which it is associated.62
6777844947mock seriousCharacterized by feigned or deliberately artificial seriousness, often for satirical purposes.63
6777848705modeThe general form, pattern, and manner of expression of a piece of discourse.64
6777852545naturalismA term often used as a synonym for realism; also a view of experience that is generally characterized as bleak and pessimistic.65
6777854528non sequiturA statement or idea that fails to follow logically from the one before.66
6777855635objective(adj.) Of or relating to facts and reality, as opposed to private and personal feelings and attitudes.67
6777857202omniscient narratorA narrator with unlimited awareness, understanding, and insight of characters, setting, background, and all other elements of the story.68
6777860237oxymoronA term consisting of contradictory elements juxtaposed to create a paradoxical effect.69
6777861250parableA story consisting of events from which a moral or spiritual truth may be derived.70
6777862727paradoxA statement that seems self-contradictory but is nevertheless true.71
6777866023parallel structureThe structure required for expressing two or more grammatical elements of equal rank. Coordinate idea,s compared and contrasted ideas and correlative constructions call for parallel construction.72
6777869233pathetic fallacyFaulty reasoning that inappropriately ascribes human feelings to nature or nonhuman objects.73
6777871488pathosThat element in literature that stimulates pity or sorrow. Also, the emotional appeal used to persuade an audience to accept a certain point of view or position.74
6777875416pedanticNarrowly academic instead of broad and humane; excessively petty and meticulous.75
6777878435periodic sentenceA sentence that departs from the usual word order of English sentences by expressing its main thought only at the end. In other words, the particulars in the sentence are presented before the idea they support.76
6777878436predicateThe part of a sentence that is not the grammatical subject. It often says something about the subject.77
6777883078psuedonymA false name or alias used by writers.78
6777884684pulp fictionNovels written for mass consumption, often emphasizing exciting and titillating plots.79
6777885834realismThe depiction of people, things, and events as they really are without idealization or exaggeration for effect.80
6777887661rebuttal/ refutationThe part of discourse wherein opposing arguments are anticipated and answered.81
6777890904retractionThe withdrawal of a previously stated idea or opinion.82
6777894580rhetoricThe language of a work and its style; words, often highly emotional, used to convince or sway an audience.83
6777895754rhetorical modeA general term that identifies discourse according to its chief purpose. Includes exposition, argumentation, description, and narration.84
6777900018rhetorical stanceLanguage that conveys a speaker's attitude or opinion with regard to a particular subject.85
6777902924sentence structureThe arrangement of the parts of a sentence. A sentence may be simple, compound, or complex. Sentences may also contain any of these structures in combination with each other. Each variation leaves a different impression on the reader, and along with other rhetorical devices, may create a countless array of effects.86
6777908464simple sentenceone subject and one verb87
6777910854compound sentencetwo or more independent clauses joined by a conjunction88
6777912385complex sentencean independent clause plus one or more dependent clauses89
6777915042simileA figurative comparison using the words like or as.90
6777917116stylistic devicesA general term referring to diction, syntax, tone, figurative language, and all other elements that contribute to the "style" or manner of a given piece of discourse.91
6777918798subject complementThe name of a grammatical unit that is comprised of predicate nominatives and predicate adjectives.92
6777920336subjective(adj.) Of or relating to private and personal feelings and attitudes as opposed to facts and reality.93
6777921804subtextThe implied meaning that underlies the main meaning of an essay or other work.94
6777924739syllogismA form of deductive reasoning in which given certain ideas or facts, other ideas or facts must follow.95
6777927008synecdocheA figure of speech in which a part signifies the whole or the whole signifies the part. When the name of a material stands for the thing itself, that, too, is this.96
6777929054transitionA stylistic device used to create a link between ideas. These often endow discourse with continuity and coherence.97
6777930646verbal ironyA discrepancy between the true meaning of a situation and the literal meaning of the written or spoken words.98
6777931766verisimilitudeSimilar to the truth; the quality of realism in a work that persuades readers that they are getting a vision of life as it is or could have been.99

AP World History : Chapter 10 Flashcards

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8116540621Middle AgesThe period in western European history between the fall of the Roman Empire and the 15th century.0
8116540622gothicAn architectural style developed during the Middle Ages in western Europe; featured pointed arches and flying buttresses as external support on main walls.1
8116540623VikingsSeagoing Scandinavian raiders who disrupted coastal areas of Europe from the 8th to 11th centuries; pushed across the Atlantic to Iceland, Greenland, and North America.2
8116540624ManorialismSystem of economic and political relations between landlords and their peasant laborers during the Middle Ages; involved a hierarchy of reciprocal obligations that exchanged labor for access to land.3
8116540625SerfsPeasant agricultural laborers within the manorial system.4
8116540626MoldboardHeavy plow introduced in northern Europe during the Middle Ages; permitted deeper cultivation of heavier soils.5
8116540627Three-field systemOne-third of the land left unplanted each year to increase fertility.6
8116540628Clovis: King of the Franks; converted to Christianity circa 4967
8116540629CarolingiansRoyal house of the Franks from the 8th to the 10th centuries8
8116540630Charles MartelCarolingian monarch of the Franks; defeated Muslims at Tours in 732.9
8116540631CharlemagneCarolingian monarch who established a large empire in France and Germany circa 80010
8116540632Holy Roman emperorsRulers in northern Italy and Germany following the breakup of Charlemagne's empire; claimed title of emperor but failed to develop centralized monarchy11
8116540633FeudalismRelationships among the military elite during the Middle Ages; greater lords provided protection to lesser lords in return for military service12
8116540634VassalsMembers of the military elite who received land or a benefice from a lord in return for military service and loyalty13
8116540635CapetiansFrench dynasty ruling from the 10th century; developed a strong feudal monarchy14
8116540636William the ConquerorInvaded England from Normandy in 1066; established tight feudal system and centralized monarchy in England15
8116540637Magna CartaGreat Charter issued by King John of England in 1215; confirmed feudal rights against monarchical claims; represented principle of mutual limits and obligations between rulers and feudal aristocracy.16
8116540638ParliamentsBodies representing privileged groups; institutionalized the feudal principle that rulers should consult their vassals17
8116540639Hundred Years WarConflict between England and France (1337-1453).18
8116540640Pope Urban IICalled First Crusade in 1095; appealed to Christians to free the Holy Land from Muslim control19
8116540641St. Clare of Assisi13th-century founder of a women's monastic order; represented a new spirit of purity and dedication to the Catholic church20
8116540642Gregory VII11th-century pope who attempted to free the Catholic church from interference of feudal lords; quarreled with Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV over the practice of lay investiture of bishops21
8116540643Peter AbelardAuthor of Yes and No; a university scholar who applied logic to problems of theology; demonstrated logical contradictions within established doctrine22
8116540644St. Bernard of ClairvauxEmphasized role of faith in preference to logic; stressed importance of mystical union with God; successfully challenged Abelard and had him driven from the universities23
8116540645Thomas AquinasCreator of one of the great syntheses of medieval learning; taught at University of Paris; author of Summas; believed that through reason it was possible to know much about natural order, moral law, and the nature of God.24
8116540646ScholasticismDominant medieval philosophical approach, so called because of its base in the schools or universities; based on the use of logic to resolve theological problems25
8116540647TroubadoursPoets in 14th-century southern France; gave a new value to the emotion of love in the Western tradition26
8116540648Hanseatic LeagueAn organization of north German and Scandinavian cities for the purpose of establishing a commercial alliance27
8116540649GuildsAssociations of workers in the same occupation in a single city; stressed security and mutual control; limited membership, regulated apprenticeship, guaranteed good workmanship, discouraged innovations; often established franchise within cities28
8116540650Black DeathPlague that struck Europe in the 14th century; significantly reduced Europe's population; affected social structure29
8116540651Roman Catholic churchChurch established in western Europe during the Roman Empire and the Middle Ages with its head being the bishop of Rome or pope.30
8116540652PopeMeaning papa or father; bishop of Rome and head of Catholic church31
8116540653FranksOne of the principal tribes of the Germanic peoples; settled in area of France during the folk migrations of the 4th and 5th centuries.32
8116540654Benedict of Nursia(480 - 550) Italian abbot who founded the monastery at Monte Cassino and the Benedictine order based on his teachings.33
8116540655Three estatesThe three social groups considered most powerful in Western countries; church, nobles, and urban leaders.34
8116540656Ferdinand and IsabellaKing Ferdinand of Aragon and Queen Isabella of Castile married in 1469 to bring the kingdoms of Spain together to complete the reconquest of Spain from the Muslims35
8116540657ReconquistaFerdinand and Isabella's attempt to drive the Muslims out of Spain.36
8116540658First Crusade(1096 - 1099) Crusade called by Pope Urban II which captured Jerusalem37
8116540659Third Crusade(1189 - 1192) Crusade led by King Richard the Lionhearted to recapture the city of Jerusalem from Islamic forces led by Saladin; failed in attempt38
8116540660Fourth Crusade(1202 - 1204) Crusade which by a strange series of events attacked and sacked Constantinople39
8116540661Francis of Assisi(1181 - 1226) Son of wealthy merchant; he renounced his wealth and chose a harsh life of poverty; later founded the Holy Order of St. Francis40
8116540662InvestitureA formal conferring of power to clergy usually with robes or other Christian symbols41
8116540663Augustine of Hippo(354 - 430) Bishop of Hippo who wrote Confessions and City of God, which formed the basis for the doctrine of man's salvation by divine grace for the church42
8116540664Roger Bacon(1214 - 1292) English philosopher and scientist who withdrew from medieval scholasticism and focused on experimental science; influenced later thinkers of the Enlightenment and Scientific Revolution43
8116540665Geoffrey ChaucerEnglish author who wrote The Canterbury Tales, a literary masterpiece written in the vernacular in which pilgrims were going to worship at the shrine of Thomas Becket at Canterbury44
8116540666RomanesqueArchitectural style which was an adaptation of the Roman basilica and barrel arch form45
8116540667BeowulfAnglo-Saxon epic poem dated to the 8th century which details Anglo-Saxon society through the adventures of the hero Beowulf46
8116540668ChivalryMedieval code used by knights which included the ideals of courage, honor, and the protection of the weak47

AP World History- Period 6 Game Flashcards

Original from MrsBHatchTEACHER

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6738458640African National CongressANC; South African political party formed in 1912; strongly opposed to apartheid0
6738458641apartheid"separateness"; a series of laws initiated by the Afrikaner National Party in South Africa which was designed to divide South African society by skin color and ethnicity; this system also reserved South Africa's resources for whites1
6738458642Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeinilived from 1900 to 1989; religious leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran2
6738458643Big Bang theorytheory which suggests that at some moment all matter in the universe was contained in a single point, which is considered the beginning of the universe3
6738458644Vladimir Leninborn Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov; lived from 1870 to 1924; the leader of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic and premier of the Soviet Union4
6738458645Central Powersone of the two warring factions in World War I; composed of Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria; also known as the Quadruple Alliance5
6738458646Charles de Gaullelived from 1890 to 1970; French general and statesman who led French forces in World War II; served as the president of France from 1959 to 19696
6738458647Che Guevaralived from 1928 to 1967; Argentine marxist revolutionary who was a major figure in the Cuban Revolution7
6738458648Chiang Kai-sheklived from 1887 to 1975; Chinese military officer who was leader of the Guomindang; fled to Taiwan after the Chinese Communist Party came to power in China8
6738458649Chinese Revolutionprolonged communist movement in China and lasted from 1946 to 1950; resulted in the communist takeover of mainland China9
6738458650Cold Wara sustained state of political and military tension between members of NATO and members of the Warsaw Pact; dissolution of the Soviet Union was the end of this "conflict"10
6738458651collectivizationalso known as collective farming and communal farming; system in which the holdings of several farmers are run collectively as a unit; imposed by the government in the Soviet Union11
6738458652command economya.k.a planned economy; the economic system in which decisions regarding production and investment are embodied in a plan formulated by a central authority, usually by a public body such as a government agency12
6738458653containmentthe United States policy to prevent the spread of communism abroad during the Cold War; a response to a series of moves by the Soviet Union to enlarge communist influence in Eastern Europe, China, Korea, Africa, and Vietnam13
6738458654Cuban missile crisisa 13-day confrontation in October 1962 between the Soviet Union and the United States; Soviet missiles moved to Cuban soil in an agreement by Fidel Castro and Nikita Khrushchev; U.S. responds by blockading Cuba; Khrushchev and U.S. President John F. Kennedy reach an agreement in which the Soviets would remove their missiles from Cuba in return for an American promise not to invade Cuba14
6738458655cultural imperialismthe practice of promoting or imposing one's culture on another, usually between powerful societies and less-powerful ones15
6738458656Cultural Revolutionalso known as the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution; launched by Mao in the late 1960's; aimed to combat the capitalist tendencies he believed had penetrated even the highest ranks of the communist party itself; involved new policies to bring health care and education to the countryside and reinvigorate earlier efforts at rural industrialization under local control16
6738458657decolonizationthe process of the dissolution of colonial territories and the establishment of independent nations17
6738458658Deng Xiaopinglived from 1904 to 1997; successor to Mao Zedong; reformist who sought to incorporate The People's Republic of China into the world economy; dismantled collectivized farming, state enterprises given greater authority, welcomed foreign investment; crushed democracy movement in Beijing's Tiananmen Square18
6738458659environmentalismideology which regards the environmental concerns19
6738458660European Economic CommunityEEC; also known as the Common Market; founded in 1957; originally consisted of Italy, France, West Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg; expanded membership to almost all of Europe, including former communist states; renamed the European Union in 199420
6738458661Fascismpolitical ideology which was intensely nationalistic; celebrated action and placed faith in charismatic leaders; and condemned individualism, liberalism, feminism, parliamentary democracy, and communism; adopted by Italy, Germany, and Japan in the years following World War I21
6738458662Five Year Plana planned economy in which a committee came together to determine rations22
6738458663fundamentalismideology which demands strict adherence to orthodox theological doctrines23
6738458664Gamel Abdel Nasserlived from 1918 to 1970; second President of Egypt from 1956 to 1970; planned the overthrow of the monarchy and sought to nationalize the Suez Canal24
6738458665UN General Assemblyone of the six principal organs of the United Nations and the only one in which all member nations have equal representation; oversee the budget of the United Nations, appoint the non-permanent members to the Security Council, receive reports from other parts of the United Nations and make recommendations in the form of General Assembly Resolutions25
6738458666genocidethe systematic destruction of all or part of a racial, ethnic, religious or national group26
6738458667Getulio Vargaslived from 1882 to 1954; ruled Brazil from 1930 to 1945; discrediting of established export elites during the Great Depression leads to his dictatorship; supported the military; took steps to modernize Brazil's urban industrial sector27
6738458668global warmingterm which refers to the continuing rise in the average temperature of Earth's climate system; viewed as a result of human emissions of greenhouse gases28
6738458669globalization of democracythe spread of democracy throughout the world29
6738458670Great Depressioneconomic depression as a result of the crash of the American stock market; lasted from 1929 until World War II; causes drop in world trade, loss of investment, and businesses unable to make profit; countries or colonies tied to exporting one or two products hardhit as the West consumed less; conditions resulting in the Great Depression led to widespread unemployment and social tensions30
6738458671Great Leap Forwardlasted from 1958 to 1960; marked Mao's response to distortions of Chinese socialism; promoted smallscale industrialization in rural areas; tried to foster widespread and practical technological education for all rather than relying on a small elite of highly trained technical experts; envisioned an immediate transition to full communism in the "people's communes" rather than waiting for industrial development to provide the material basis for that transition; massive famine which followed temporarily discredited Mao's radicalism31
6738458672Great Purgesalso known as the Terror; period of immense paranoia in the Soviet Union of the late 1930's in which communist members accused each other being corrupted by capitalist ideals; enveloped tens of thousands of prominent communists, including all of Lenin's top associates, and millions more of ordinary peoples; based on suspicious associations in the past, denunciations by colleagues, connections to foreign countries, or bad luck; such people were arrested in the middle of the night, then tried and sentenced to either death or long harsh years in remote labor camps known as gulags; close to 1 million peoples executed between 1936 and 1941; additional 4 to 5 million people sent to the gulag, where they were forced to work in horrendous conditions and died in appalling numbers32
6738458673Green Revolutiona series of research, and development, and technology transfer initiatives, occurring between the 1940s and the late 1960s, that increased agriculture production worldwide, particularly in the developing world33
6738458674Adolf Hitlerlived from 1889 to 1945; leader of the Nazi party in Germany; chancellor of Germany from 1933 to 1945; dictator of Nazi Germany from 1934 to 194534
6738458675Ho Chi Minhlived from 1890 to 1969; Vietnamese communist revolutionary leader; was prime minister (from 1945 to 1955) and president (from 1945 to 1969) of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam35
6738458676Holocaustthe mass murder of approximately six million Jews during World War II; a program of systematic state-sponsored murder by Nazi Germany; led by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party36
6738458677International Monetary FundIMF; established in 1944 by the Bretton Woods Conference in New Hampshire; sought to promote market economies, free trade, and high growth rates37
6738458678Indian National CongressINC; organization established in 1885; gave expression to the idea of India as a single nation; played a major role in India's independence movement from British colonial rule38
6738458679Iranian Cultural Revolutionlasted from 1980 to 198; a period following the Iranian Revolution where intellectuals of Iran were purged of Western and non-Islamic influences to bring it in line with Shia Islam; closed universities between 1980 and 1983, banned many books, and purged thousands of students and lecturers from schools39
6738458680iron curtainthe heavily fortified border between Eastern and Western Europe40
6738458681Islamic renewalalso referred to as Islamic revival; refers to a renewing of the Islamic religion throughout the Islamic world, that began roughly sometime in 1970s; sought greater religious piety and a growing adoption of Islamic culture41
6738458682Jawaharlal Nehrulived from 1889 to 1964; first Prime Minister of India and was a leading figure in the independence movement against British rule over India42
6738458683League of Arab Statesa regional organization of Arab countries in and around North Africa, the Horn of Africa, and Southwest Asia; formed in Cairo in 1945 with six members: Egypt, Iraq, Transjordan (Jordan), Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Syria; currently has 22 members43
6738458684League of Nationsinternational peacekeeping organization founded as a result of the First World World; proposed by US president Woodrow Wilson; committed to the principle of "collective security" and intended to avoid the repetition of war44
6738458685Mahatma Gandhilived from 1869 to 1948; leader of the Indian nationalist movement during British control over India; used nonviolent civil disobedience, such as hunger strikes45
6738458686Mao Zedonglived from 1893 to 1976; Chinese communist revolutionary and leader of the People's Republic of China from its establishment 1949 to his death in 197646
6738458687Marshall Planplan which sought to rebuild and reshape devastated European economies; funneled Europe some $12 billion with numerous advisers and technicians; motivated by combination of humanitarian concern, a desire to prevent a new depression by creating overseas customers for American goods, and interest in undermining the growing appeal of European communist parties; required European nations to cooperate with one another47
6738458688Mikhail Gorbachevborn in 1931; last general secretary of the Soviet Union (1985 to 1991); passed reforms such as perestroika and policies such as glasnost which led to the dissolution of the Soviet Union48
6738458689military-industrial complexthe policy and monetary relationships which exist between legislators, national armed forces, and the military industrial base that supports them; include political contributions, political approval for military spending, lobbying to support bureaucracies, and oversight of the industry; most often used in reference to the system behind the military of the United States49
6738458690Muhammad Ali Jinnahlived from 1876 to 1948; founder of Pakistan and the leader of the All-India Muslim League until Pakistan's independence50
6738458691Munich Conferencea conference in Munich which permitted Nazi Germany's annexation of portions of Czechoslovakia along German borders mainly inhabited by German speakers; territory now known as "Sudetenland"; widely regarded as a failed act of appeasement toward Germany; agreement was signed in the early hours of 30 September 1938; agreement was signed by Germany, France, the United Kingdom, and Italy; Czechoslovakia not invited to the conference51
6738458692Benito Mussolinilived from 1883 to 1945; leader of the Italian National Fascist Party; prime minister of Italy from 1922 to 194352
6738458693Mustafa Kemal Ataturklived from 1881 to 1938; founder and the first President of the Republic of Turkey; passed a series of reforms to transform the former Ottoman Empire into a modern, secular, and democratic nation53
6738458694North American Free Trade AgreementNAFTA; regional alliance founded in 1993 and consists of Canada, Mexico, and the United States; the world's second largest free-trade zone54
6738458695North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationNATO; a military alliance based on the North Atlantic Treaty which was signed in 1949; alliance in which its member states agree to mutual defense in response to an attack by any external party; consists of 28 member states across North America and Europe55
6738458696Nazi Germanya.k.a the Third Reich; lasted from 1933 to 1945; Germany under the leadership of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party56
6738458697Nelson Mandelalived from 1918 to 2013; South African anti-apartheid revolutionary and politician; President of South Africa from 1994 to 1999; served as President of the African National Congress from 1991 to 199757
6738458698New Deala series of reforms proposed by United States President Woodrow Wilson; lasted from 1933 to 1942; experimental combination of reforms seeking to restart economic growth and prevent similar failures in the future; reflected the thinking of British economist John Maynard Keynes; argued that government actions and spending programs could moderate recessions and depressions; consisted of immediate programs of public spending (for dams, highways, bridges, and parks) and long-term reforms, such as the Social Security system, minimum wage, and various relief and welfare programs58
6738458699non-governmental organizationNGO; an organization that is neither a part of a government nor a conventional for-profit business59
6738458700Nikita Khrushchevlived from 1894 to 1971; leader of the Soviet Union from 1953 to 1964; responsible for the de-Stalinization of the Soviet Union and backing of the Soviet space program60
6738458701Osama bin Ladenlived from 1957 to 2011; Islamic militant who was the leader of the terrorist group al-Qaeda; mastermind behind the 9/11 attacks; played a key role in the US-backed effort to aid mujahideen who fought Soviet forces in Afghanistan61
6738458702al-Qaeda"the base"; terrorist organization formerly headed by Osama bin Laden; behind the 9/11 attacks62
6738458703Palestinian Liberation OrganizationPLO; an organization founded in 1964 with the purpose of creating an independent State of Palestine63
6738458704Pan-Arabisman ideology proposing the unification of the countries of North Africa and West Asia from the Atlantic Ocean to the Arabian Sea, referred to as the Arab World64
6738458705Pan-Africanisman ideology which encourages the unity of Africans worldwide65
6738458706HIV/AIDS epidemicepidemic which was first discovered in 1981 among homosexual men and intravenous drug users in New York and San Francisco; eventually became widespread around the world, particularly sub-Saharan Africa; virus attacks and destroys the immune system, which causes a fatal disorder in the immune system; spread through sexual contact with an infected person, contact with contaminated blood, and transmission from mother to child during pregnancy and breastfeeding66
6738458707ebola epidemican epidemic caused by the Ebola virus; symptoms include fever, throat and muscle pains, headaches, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, and decreased functioning of the liver and kidneys; an 2014 outbreak in West Africa has led to a reported 142 deaths67
6738458708influenza epidemican epidemic caused by the H1N1 influenza virus; lasted from 1918 to 1920; resulted in 50 to 100 million deaths, ranking it one of the most deadliest natural disasters in human history68
6738458709perestroikaan economic program launched by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev which freed state enterprises from government regulation, permitted small-scale private businesses, offered opportunities for private farming, and welcomed foreign investment in joint enterprises69
6738458710glasnosta Soviet policy established by Mikhail Gorbachev which permitted cultural and intellectual freedoms70
6738458711post-modernisma late 20th Century movement in the arts, architecture, and criticism; includes skeptical interpretations of culture, literature, art, philosophy, history, economics, architecture, fiction, and literary criticism71
6738458712Potsdam Conferencea conference which was held from July 17 to August 2, 1945; participants include the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States; gathered to decide how to punish Nazi Germany, sought to establish a post-war order, address peace treaty issues, and counter the effects of World War II72
6738458713Prague Springa period of political liberalization in Czechoslovakia during the era of Soviet domination; began on January 5, 1968, when reformist Alexander Dubček was elected First Secretary of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, and continued until August 21 when the Soviet Union and other members of the Warsaw Pact invaded the country to halt the reforms73
67384587141917 Russian Revolutiona collective term for the series of revolutions in 1917 which ousted Tsar Nicholas II and the tsarist autocracy and replaced it with the communist Bolshiveks74
6738458715second-wave feminisma period of feminist activity that first began in the United States in the early 1960s and eventually spread throughout the Western world; later became a worldwide movement that was strong in Europe and parts of Asia, such as Turkey and Israel; focused on sexuality, family, the workplace, reproductive rights, and various legal and de facto inequalities75
6738458716UN Security Councilone of the six principal organs of the United Nations; in charge of the maintenance of international peace and security; this body is able to establish peacekeeping operations, establish international sanctions, and authorize military action through resolutions; the only UN body with the authority to issue binding resolutions to member states76
6738458717space racelasted from 1955 to 1972; a competition between the Soviet Union and the United States for supremacy in spaceflight capability; pioneered advancements such as artificial satellites, as well as manned and unmanned missions into outer space77
6738458718sphere of influencea concept in which a state or organization has a level of cultural, economic, military, or political exclusivity, accommodating to the interests of powers outside the sphere; examples include European "semi-colony" of China78
6738458719Joseph Stalinlived from 1878 to 1953; the leader of the Soviet Union from 1922 to 1952; implemented a highly centralized command economy, which resulted in the transformation of Russian society from agrarian to industrialized; imprisoned millions in labor camps and deported many to remote areas; issued the Great Purges, in which hundreds of thousands, including many prominent communists, were executed79
6738458720theory of relativitytheory which is composed of special relativity and general relativity; proposed by Albert Einstein; proposes that measurements of various quantities are relative to the velocities of observers, space and time should be considered together and in relation to each other (Spacetime), and the speed of light is constant80
6738458721Third Worldterm which describes the countries that did not align with the Soviet Union or the United States81
6738458722total warwar which requires the mobilization of each country's entire populations82
6738458723transnational corporationsa.k.a multi-national corporation; an organization that owns or controls production or services facilities in one or more countries other than its home country83
6738458724Treaty of Versaillestreaty which formally concluded the World War I in 1919; established the conditions for a World War II; Germany losses colonial empire and 15% of its European territory, required to pay heavy reparations to the winners, had its military forces severely restricted, and had to accept sole responsibility for the war; immense German resentment created from the treaty84
6738458725trench warfaretype of warfare using occupied fighting lines consisting largely of trenches, in which troops are significantly protected from the enemy's small arms fire and are substantially sheltered from artillery; resulted in enormous casualties while gaining or losing a few yards of ground during World War I85
6738458726Truman Doctrinean international relations policy set by the U.S. President Harry Truman in a speech on March 12, 1947; stated that the U.S. would support Greece and Turkey with economic and military aid to prevent them from falling into the Soviet sphere; often referred to as the beginning of the US policy of containment86
6738458727United Nationsorganization established in 1945 as a successor to the League of Nations; attempts to find solutions to global problems and deal with virtually any matter of concern to humanity87
6738458728Vietnam Warwar which occurred in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia from 1956 to 1975; U.S. entered the war to prevent South Vietnam from becoming communist, as a result of its containment policy; Soviet Union backed Northern Vietnamese forces in an attempt to spread communism to Southeast Asia; resulted in the unification of Vietnam under a communist government and the spread of communism to Cambodia and Laos88
6738458729Weimar Republicthe federal republic and semi-presidential representative democracy established in 1919 in Germany to replace the imperial form of government after World War I; lasted until the Nazi Party rose to power in 1933; faced numerous problems, including hyperinflation, political extremists and continuing contentious relationships with the victors of World War I89
6738458730Winston Churchilllived from 1874 to 1965; British politician; Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945 and from 1951 to 195590
6738458731weapon of mass destructionWMD; a weapon which has the capability to kill large numbers of people and decimate large swaths of land91
6738458732Woodrow Wilsonlived from 1856 to 1924; 28th President of the United States (1913-1921); leader of the Progressive Movement; famous for his Fourteen Points, which sought to avoid another worldwide conflict92
6738458733Fourteen Pointsa statement given on January 8, 1918 by United States President Woodrow Wilson declaring that World War I was being fought for a moral cause and called for postwar peace in Europe93
6738458734World Banka United Nations international financial institution that provides loans to developing countries for capital programs; its primary goal is to reduce poverty94
6738458735World War Iwar which lasted from 1914 to 1918; also known as the Great War; pitted the Allies (United Kingdom, France, Russia, Italy, Japan, and the United States) and the Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and Bulgaria); resulted in an Allied victory and Treaty of Versailles, which set the stage for another world war95
6738458736World War IIwar which lasted from 1939 to 1945; pitted the Allied Powers (Soviet Union, United Kingdom, United States, China and France) against the Axis Powers (Germany, Japan, and Italy); resulted in an Allied victory, the creation of the United Nations, and set the stage for the Cold War96
6738458737World Trade OrganizationWTO; established in 1994 by the 123 members of GATT; took over GATT activities in 1995; developed into a forum for settling international trade disputes97
6738458738Yalta Conferenceconference which lasted from February 4 to February 11, 1945; meeting attended by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Premier Joseph Stalin for the purpose of discussing Europe's post-war reorganization; convened in the Livadia Palace near Yalta in Crimea98
6738458739Zionist Movementthe national movement of Jews and Jewish culture that supports the creation of a Jewish homeland in the territory defined as the Land of Israel99
6738458740Brazilian SolutionCombination of dictatorship, violent repression, and gov't promotion of industrialization in South American countries100
6738458741Universal Declaration of Human RightsA 1946 United Nations covenant binding signatory nations to the observance of specified rights.101
6738458742nongovernmental organizationsOrganizations that are not established or associated with any specific organizations. They may be recognized, however, they run on their own. Examples are Green Peace and Amnesty International.102
6738458743Tiananmen SquareSite in Beijing where Chinese students and workers gathered to demand greater political openness in 1989. The demonstration was crushed by Chinese military with great loss of life.103
6738458744keiretsuJapanese business groups after the post-WWII dismantling of the zaibatsu. They are Alliances of corporations each often centered around a bank. They dominate the post-WWII Japanese economy.104
6738458745Salvador AllendeThe first Marxist politician elected president in the Americas. He was elected president of Chile in 1970 and overthrown by a US-backed military coup in 1973.105
6738458746NATOAn international organization created in 1949 by the North Atlantic Treaty for purposes of collective security.106
6738458747Warsaw PactAn alliance between the Soviet Union and other Eastern European nations. This was in response to the NATO107

AP WORLD: CHAPTER 6 VOCABULARY Flashcards

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7241906492Austronesian peoplespeople who was early as 2000 BCE began to explore and settle islands of the Pacific Ocean Why does it matter: shows new migration patterns and development to how they got there0
7241907598Bloodletting rituala ritual that involves the intentional release of blood,can be a symbolic rebirth or death Why does it matter: shows their belief system and an importance to what they are doing1
7241908339Chavin Cultmysterious but very popular South American religion Why does it matter: shows religious differences all over the world2
7241910340Chichen Itzasite in northern Mexico, center of Mayan empire after ad 918 till about 1200 Why does it matter: shows what their center was and importance of it3
7241911681Colossal human headsseventeen monumental stone representations of human heads Why does it matter: shows importance and what they believed in/could be important people in their history4
7241912651Kaminaljuyusite during the Maya civilization that was occupied during 1500 BC till AD 1200 Why does it matter: shows different important cities during the civilization5
7241914253Lapitaculture used for Prehistoric Pacific Ocean people (1600-500 BCE) Why does it matter: shows different types of culture all over the world6
7241914254Maizecorn Why does it matter: tells us what they ate and one of their stable crops7
7241914255Mayabrilliant Central American society (300-1000) known for math, astronomy,and a sophisticated written language Why does it matter: shows early American civilizations and their developments8
7241915756Maya ball gamegame in which Maya peoples used a hard rubber ball to propel through a ring without using their hands. Often used for ritual and ceremonial purposes Why does it matter: shows new twists on rituals than past civilizations9
7241915777Mayan calendarsystem of calendars used in Mesoamerica Why does it matter: show show developed they were to tell time and what day it was10
7241918711Mesoamericaarea extending from central Mexico to Honduras where diverse civilizations thrived Why does it matter: gives us an idea of where most civilizations were located11
7241920062MochicaPre-Incan South American society (300-700) known for their brilliant ceramics Why does it matter: shows early art and influence it had12
7241921658Oceaniaterm referring to the Pacific Ocean basin and its lands Why does it matter: shows early terms13
7241922526Olmecsearly Mesoamerican society (1200-100) BCE that centered on sites at San Lorenzo, La Venta, and Tres Zapatos and that influenced later Maya Why does it matter: led to influences of later Maya14
7241924194Popol VuhMayan creation epic Why does it matter: shows signs of literature and what it was based on15
7241925627TeotihuacanCentral American society (200-750 BCE); its Pyramid of the Sun was the largest structure in Mesoamerica Why does it matter: shows how developed they were to be able to build the structure and shows what they believed in16
7241928145TikalMaya political center from the fourth through the ninth century Why does it matter: tells us where the most important place was17

AP world history vocab 2 Flashcards

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8403956918MataramKingdom that controlled interior regions of Java in 17th century; Dutch East India Company payed tribute to the kingdom for rights of trade at Batavia; weakness of kingdom after 1670s allowed Dutch to exert control over all of Java0
8403956919sepoystroops that serves the British East India Company; recruiting mainly from various were like peoples of India1
8403956920British RajBritish political establishment in India; developed as a result of the rivalry between France and Britain and India2
8403956921PlasseyBattle in 1757 between trips of the British East India Company and an Indian army under Siraj ud-daula, ruler of Bengal; British victory march the rise of British control over northern India3
8403956922Robert CliveArchitect of British victory at Plassey and 1757; establish foundations of British garage in northern India (18th century)4
8403956923Presidenciesthree districts that made up the bulk of the directly ruled British territories in India; capitals at Madras, Calcutta, and Bombay5
8403956924Princely statesdomains of Indian princes allied with the British Raj; agents of East India Company were stationed at the ruler's courts to ensure compliance; made up over 1/3 of the British Indian empire6
8403956925nabobsName given to British representatives of the East India Company who went briefly to India to make fortune through graft and exploitation7
8403956926Lord Charles Cornwallisreformer of the East India Company administration of India in the 1790s; reduce power of local British administrators; checked widespread corruption8
8403956927Ram Mohun RoyWestern educated Indian leader, early 19th century; cooperated with British to outlaw sati9
8403956928IsandhlwanaLocation of battle fought in 1879 between the British and Zulu armies in south Africa; resulted in defeat of British; one a few victories in African forces over Western Europeans10
8403956929Tropical dependenciesColonies with substantial indigenous populations of a rule by small European political and military minorities with the assistance of colonize bureaucrats, soldiers, clerks and servants11
8403956930Settlement coloniesAreas, such as North American Australia, that we're both conquered by European invaders and settled by large numbers of European migrants who made the colonized areas their permanent home and dispersed and decimated the indigenous inhabitants12
8403956931White dominionsColonies of what European settlers made up the overwhelming majority of the population; small numbers of native inhabitants were typically reduced by disease more the conquest; typical of British holdings in North America and Australia with growing independence in the 19 century13
8403956932White racial supremacyBelieve in inherent mental, moral, and cultural superiority of weights; Pete in acceptance in decades before World War I; supported by social science doctrines of social Darwinist such as Herbert Spencer14
8403956933NatalBritish colony in south Africa; developed after Boer trek north from Cape colony; major commercial outpost at Durban15
8403956934Boer republicstransvaal and orange free state in southern Africa; established to assert independence of boers from British colonial government in Cape colony in 1850s; discovery of diamonds and precious metals cause bridge migration into the board areas in 1860s16
8403956935Cecil RhodesBritish entrepreneur in south Africa around 1900; manipulated political situation in South Africa to gain entry to resources of Boer republic; encourage Boer war as meanings of destroying Boer independence17
8403956936Anglo-Boer warfought between 1899 and 1902 over the continued independence of Boer republics; resulted in British victory but begin the process of decolonization for whites in south Africa18
8403956937Captain James Cookmade voyages to Hawaii from 1777 to 1779 resulting in opening of islands to the west; convinced Kamehameha to establish united kingdom in the islands19

Biochemistry Flashcards

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7963415988Carbon compoundscontain carbon, make up living things Can form 4 bonds Bonds can be with other elements or carbon Can be lots of shapes and sizes0
7963415989Functional groupsSpecial groups of atoms that usually participate in reactions Give different compounds different properties All functional groups important to life are polar1
7963415990HydrophilicWater loving2
7963415991HydrophobicWater hating3
7963415992MacromoleculesGigantic molecules, thousands of atoms4
79634159934 Types of MacromoleculesCarbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acids, lipids5
7963415994MonomersIndividual building blocks of polymers6
7963415995PolymersChains of identical or similar molecules7
7963415996CarbohydratesMain source of energy for cellular work8
7963415997OrganicMostly carbon (C) and Hydrogen (H)9
7963415998InorganicOther elements, little or no C10
7963415999Dehydration SynthesisAdded monomers lose H or OH Release water Bond at oxygen - forms a bridge Polymer formed Building polymers/monomers together11
7963416000Hydrolysis ReactionWater added to break bonds in polymers Reverse of dehydration synthesis Breaking polymers apart12
79634160014 Characteristics of CarbohydratesMade up of rings (or ring looking structure) Made up of ration CH2O End in "ose" OH (hydroxyl group)13
7963416002Monosaccharidemonomer Simple sugar14
7963416003Disaccharide2 monosaccharides bonded Double sugar15
7963416004Polysaccharide3 or more monosaccharides bonded Complex carb16
7963416005Function of CarbsShort term energy Storage: polysaccharides17
7963416006GlycogenHow animals store excess sugar Mostly stored in liver and muscle cells When your glucose levels are low, broken down18
7963416007StarchHow plants store extra sugar Humans and other animals can break down Examples: potatoes, plantains, rice19
7963416008CelluloseStructural Make plants rigid Cell walls Can't be broken down by humans and animals Examples: corn, legumes, lettuce20
7963416009LipidsMade mostly of C and H, some O and P Mostly nonpolar Hydrophobic Common lipids: fat, oils, waxes21
7963416010Main Function of LipidsEnergy storage (long term)22
7963416011Additional functions of lipidsCushioning and insulation23
7963416012Monomers that make up lipidsGlycerol and fatty acids24
7963416013Saturated FatNo double bonds in the fatty acid Solid at room temperature SATURATED with hydrogens25
7963416014Unsaturated FatDouble bonds in the fatty acid Liquid at room temperature26
7963416015Trans FatReally bad for you - causing cancer, diabetes, obesity, other health concerns27
7963416016PhospholipidsGlycerol with only two fatty acids Major component of CELL MEMBRANES Form a double layer in water28
7963416017WaxesProtective coat for fruits and animals29
7963416018HormonesSteroids30
7963416019Proteins (Function)Structure, storage, defense, transport, and speeding up reactions Found in hair, muscles, feathers Common foods: meat, eggs, nuts31
7963416020Proteins (Structure)Monomers: amino acids Amino group, carboxyl group, hydrogen and R group Only 20 different R genes Polymers: polypeptides STRUCTURE = FUNCTION32
7963416021Protein SynthesisLink between the C and the N: peptide bond 2 amino acids joined = dipeptide bond33
7963416022Primary Protein StructureChain of amino acids34
7963416023DenaturationUnravel/altar structure of a protein DESTROY35
7963416024Secondary Protein StructureFolding/coiling pattern36
7963416025Tertiary StructureOverall 3D shape37
7963416026Quaternary StructureMultiple polypeptide chains twisted together38
7963416027Nucleic Acids FunctionStore and transmit genetic information Heredity/genetics39
7963416028Nucleic Acid monomersNucleotides40
7963416029Two types of nucleic acidsDNA - Deoxyribonucleic Acid RNA - Ribonucleic Acid41
7963416030Nucleic Acid StructureMade of C, H, O, N and P 5 carbon sugar, phosphate group, nitrogenous base42

Biochemistry Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
4877492217Organic compoundsContain carbon atoms that are covalently bonded to one another0
4877496288PolymersInclude carbohydrates, nucleic acids, proteins, and lipids. They are large biomolecules that are often made up of smaller units called monomers1
4877502413CarbohydratesKnown as carbs, sugars, or saccharides. Made up of elements C, H, and O, usually in a 1:2:1 ratio.2
4877507927MonosaccharideOne sugar or one monomer (ex: glucose and fructose)3
4877514562IsomerSame formula, different 3-dimensional structure.4
4877518414SucroseGlucose + Fructose5
4877521769Dehydration synthesis reactionRemoving a water molecule6
4877524242AmylopectinBranched starch7
4877525666GlucoseHexagonal ring8
4877533179FructosePentagonal ring9
4877534850EnantiomerMirror image isomers10
4877539095DisaccharideTwo sugars11
4877540904PolysaccharideHundreds or thousands of sugars12
4877545236StarchChemical energy storage molecule in plants13
4877546406GlycogenMolecules used by animals to store chemical energy in the liver or muscles. Turns sugar in blood into tissues.14
4877553217CelluloseA strong building block in plants that forms cell walls. We get vitamins and minerals rather than energy out of this.15
4877559114ChitinForms strong outer covering in insects, crustaceans, and arachnids16
4877561857LipidsNonpolar molecules that are made of C, H, and O (mostly C and H) in a ratio that is 1:2: very few. Can be in waxes, such as water repellent for insects, plants, or feathers. Phospholipids make up cell membranes. Some of these make up steroid hormones that are used as chemical signals in the body (estrogen and testosterone).17
4877570673TriglyceridesFats that store large amounts of chemical energy- around twice as much as a carbohydrate. These are made of glycerol that is attached to 3 fatty acids.18
4877585009Saturated triglyceridesFatty acids that are saturated with hydrogen made of animal fats. These are solid at room temperature and are known as "bad fats".19
4877586521Unsaturated triglyceridesThese are plant oils that are liquid at room temperature and are called "good fats".`20
4877590071ProteinsMade up of monomers called amino acids. These amino acids contain C, H, O, and N and are linked together by peptide bonds.21
4877622771Amino acidsMake up proteins. These are linked together by peptide bonds. There are 20 necessary _________ _______ for humans, but we can only produce 12 of them.22
4877628294Peptide bondStrong covalent bond between two amino acids. These are always between a carboxyl group and an amino group.23
4877634671InsulinA hormone secreted by the pancreas that helps regulate the amount of glucose in the blood. This is a type of glucose hormone.24
4877641528LactaseAn enzyme that catalyzes the breakdown of lactose (sugar found in milk). Some adults lose the ability to produce this, which results in lactose intolerance.25
4877649365-aseSuffix for enzymes26
4877651005Structural proteinsMake spider silk, hair, horns, and feathers.27
4877652889Transport proteinsTransport nutrients and oxygen.28
4877655765HemoglobinA protein complex that binds to oxygen in red blood cells.29
4877659549AntibodiesDisease-fighting immune proteins in your immune system that recognize and destroy foreign invaders.30
4942329171Nucleic AcidMade of monomers called nucleotides. Most are used to transmit hereditary information in the form of DNA. Made of C,H,O,N,P.31
4942346435ATPA chemical energy storage molecule.32
4942350435Chemical reactionChanging one type of molecule into another by making or breaking bonds. These convert reactants to products.33
4942360522ReactantSubstance that is changed in a reaction.34
4942365899ProductSubstance that is created in a reaction.35
4942370507Exothermic reactionReaction in which more energy is released than the amount that is absorbed. Products have a lower bond energy than the reactants. The extra energy that is produced is given off as either heat or light. Examples are burning, water freezing, cellular respiration, and instant heat packs.36
4942389371Endothermic reactionReaction in which more energy is absorbed than the amount that is released. Products have a higher bond energy than the reactants. Examples are water boiling, photosynthesis, and ice melting.37
4942420295Activation energyThe amount of energy needed to start a chemical reaction.38
4942427769EnzymesMolecules that lower activation energy. They catalyze biological reactions. These lower the activation energy by bringing reactants together, holding reactants in the correct position, and straining bonds within each reactant. Most of these are proteins with names that end in -ase.39
4942458498Anabolic enzymesEnzymes that build things up.40
4942465982Catabolic enzymesEnzymes that break things down.41
4942473162Lock-and-keyEnzymes and substrates fit together perfectly. There is a high degree of similarity between the shape of the substrate and the geometry of the binding site on the enzyme.42
4942476489Induced fitSubstrate induces a change in the shape of the enzyme to form a bond. The binding of the substrate induces the conformation of the enzyme.43
4942509839PepsinThe substance that breaks up peptide bonds.44
4942513784DenaturingWhen proteins cannot do their jobs because they have changed shape.45
4942521478AtomThe smallest unit of matter that retains the properties of an element. The nucleus contains protons and neutrons.46
4942530517Covalent bondsAtoms share electrons to fill valence shells.47
4942535211Ionic bondsAtoms lose or gain electrons to fill valence shell.48
4942543326IonAtom or group of atoms with a positive (cation) or negative (anion) charge.49
4942644861ElementMade of atoms with the same number of protons.50
4942651572MoleculeA group of atoms held together by covalent bonding.51
4942655615CompoundA molecule containing two or more elements.52
4942660942Polar moleculeHas one side with a slight positive charge and one side with a slight negative charge due to uneven bonding. In these, electrons are not evenly shared by the atoms.53
4942677808Nonpolar moleculeHas no net charge. These are unable to bond with polar molecules.54
4942687948Hydrogen bondsThe hydrogen-containing region of a polar molecule that is attracted to the negative region of another polar molecule. These bonds are weaker than covalent and ionic.55
4943545577CohesionAttraction between molecules of the same type.56
4943550341AdhesionAttraction between unlike molecules.57
4943559031SolutionWhen any one substance is dissolved into another.58
4943561795SoluteThe substance of which there is less. This substance dissolves into the other.59
4943570129SolventThe substance of which there is a greater amount.60
4943573780AcidsSubstances that release hydrogen ions into water when dissolved into water. These have a pH of less than 7.61
4943585009BasesSubstances that accept hydrogen ions of form hydroxide ions in water. These have a pH of greater than 7 and are usually bitter and slippery.62
4943595645pH scaleBased on the percentage of hydrogen ions in a solution.63
4943601182HydrofilicPolar substances that can dissolve in water.64
4943606567HydrophobicNonpolar substances that are being pushed out of water by its cohesive substances.65

Biochemistry 1 Flashcards

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6219746574alpha helixsecondary structure A spiral shape constituting one form of the secondary structure of proteins, arising from a specific hydrogen-bonding structure. Proline and glycine0
6219747731Beta-pleated sheetsSecondary structure backbone hydrogen bonding between adjacent parallel or anti-parallel polypeptides assume a pleated shape (amino residues point in alternation above and below)1
62197477321/2 VmaxKm is the concentration of 1/2 Vmax competitive inhibition increases Km Uncompetitve inhibition decreases Km, 1/2 vmax, Vmax Mixed inhibition decreases/increases Km, decreases 1/2 vmax, decreases Vmax2
6219748533Active siteThe part of an enzyme or antibody where the chemical reaction occurs. Substrate binds to the enzyme at this particular location.3
6219748534Adenineit is a purine it pairs with Thymine4
6322813400Urea denaturesH Bonds5
6322814692Salt or change in pH effectsElectrostatic bonds in proteins6
6322819725Beta MercaptoethanolDisulfide Bonds7
6322821014Organic solventsHydrophobic Forces8
6322822946Heat denatures...all forces(h-bonds, disulfide, electrostatic,9
6219749585AdipocytesFat cells specialized fat cells whose cytoplasm contains nothing but triglycerides10
6219749586allosteric activatorsassist the enzyme by building the enzyme on a site other than the active site to boost the activivty. bind tightly to the high affinity R state of the enzyme than the T state. Activators increase the amount of enzyme in the active state, thereby facilitating substrate binding in their own and other subunits.11
6219753596Allosteric inhibitorsmodify the active site of an enzyme so that substrate binding is reduced/prevented. bind more tightly to the T state, which means either substrate concentration or activator concentration must be increased to overcome the effect of the inhibitor12
6219753597Allosteric interactionswhen a molecule binds and a conformational change occurs and the primary binding site will be changed to either bind the substrate more tightly or not bind it tightly at all.13
6219754777allosteric regulationsWhen a protein's function at one site is affected by the binding of a regulatory molecule to a separate site.14
6219754778AmideRCONH215
6219754779Amino AcidsBuilding blocks of proteins Monomer of Proteins16
6219755575Amphipathic and exampleA molecule that has both a hydrophilic region and a hydrophobic region. phospholipids17
6219755576AntiparallelThe opposite arrangement of the sugar-phosphate backbones in a DNA double helix. 5-3 and 3-518
6219757052ATP(adenosine triphosphateHigh energy nucleotide that runs that life of the cell. made by glycolysis and Krebs cycle19
6219757053Base-pairingA - T 2 H bonds G- C 3 H bonds holds dan together in a double helix through H bonds principle that bonds in DNA can form only between adenine and thymine and between guanine and cytosine20
6219757896Base-pairs bpA - T 2 H bonds G- C 3 H bonds21
6219757897carbohydrates"Compound containing carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen in the approximate ratio of C:2H:O (e.g., sugars, starches, and cellulose)" Main source of energy22
6219758936Catalyst(chemistry) a substance that initiates or accelerates a chemical reaction without itself being affected The lower the activation energy of a reaction and thereby increasing the rate23
6219758937Celluloseß-1,4 linkage Carbohydrate component of plant cell walls.24
6219822132Why can we not digest celluloseß-1,4 linkage and we don't have the enzymes to break this down.25
6219759965CoenzymesOrganic Cofactors An organic molecule that is a necessary participant in some enzymatic reactions; helps catalysis by donating or accepting electrons or functional groups; e.g., a vitamin, ATP, NAD+.26
6371715577two subgroups of coenzymescosubstrates and prosthetic groups27
6219759966CofactorsAny nonprotein molecule or ion that is required for the proper functioning of an enzyme. Cofactors can be permanently bound to the active site or may bind loosely with the substrate during catalysis28
6219761224Difference between cofactor and coenzymeCoenzyme has to be organic, normally an enzyme, a coenzyme can be a cofactor29
6219762607competitive inhibitors.A substance that reduces the activity of an enzyme by entering the active site in place of the substrate whose structure it mimics. It increases the Km has no effect on Vmax Inhibitor that competes for binding at the enzyme active site30
6219763181Complementary strandsrelation between two nucleotide strands of DNA in which each purine on one strand pairs with a specific pyrimidine on the opposite strand - A and T; C and G31
6219764439conformational changean alteration of the structure of the protein that impacts that protein's function32
6219765560Cysteine why is it importantits an amino acid that can make disulfide bonds33
6219765561Cystinecysteine cystein dimer with a dissulfide bridge bond34
6219767000Difference between Cystine and Cysteinecysteine cystein dimer with a dissulfide bridge bond35
6219768027CytosineC pyrimidine that binds with G 3 h bonds36
6219768719Dehydrationthe formation of bonds the formation of a peptide bond product is water two molecules come together to form a bond.37
6219770579Dehydration reactions do what to bonds?Formation of a bond38
6219770580Denaturedloss of native fold of proteins An uncoiled, or unraveled protein, the protein has lost its shape due to high temperatures or strong chemicals, its weak bonds have broken and the protein cannot perform its job, since it no longer "fits" with other molecules39
6322961070there are two types of proteins what are they?Globular and structural40
6219772763What process denature native protein foldsHeat, Urea, beta mercaptoethanol, SDS, Salt and Ph41
6219786001DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)A molecule that carries the genetic code for all living organisms.42
6219786870Differences between DNA and RNA1. RNA has ribose suga 1. DNA is the "Master plan" and RNA is the "inexpensive blueprints DNA-Double helix RNA-Single heli RNA is single stranded, DNA is double stranded43
6219786871Double HelixThe form of native DNA, referring to its two adjacent polynucleotide strands wound into a spiral shape.44
6219788298WHy DNA goes into a double helixH bonds Negative back bone the major and minor grooves have 10 base pairs per spiral45
6219806957Entropy Definitionmeasure of disorder is a measure or randomness or disorder, symbol S46
6219809376Entropy and how that it is involved in Enzymes catalytic activityEnzymes lower activation energy and the interactions between enzyme active site and substrates are more favorable for entropy47
6219810491Enzyme SpecificityEnzymes will only catalyze a single reaction or class of reactions with theses substrates. There are six categories. enzymes are designed to work only on a specific substrate or group of closely related substrates48
6371770105a tight fit represents what type of Km?a Lower Km49
6371774818a lower Km means what about the fit in the enzymetight fit50
6219810492Enzyme-substrate complexA temporary complex formed when an enzyme binds to its substrate molecule(s). formed by the temporary binding of enzyme and reactants enables the collisions to be more effective and LOWERS THE ACTIVATION ENERGY OF THE REACTION51
6219812260EnzymesCatalysts for chemical reactions in living things52
63717977546 Types of Enzymes1. hydrolases 2. isomerases 3. ligases or polymerases 4. lyases 5. oxidoreductases 6. transferases53
6219812261Enzymes functioncontrols rates of metabolic rxns by lowering activation energy54
6219814844E + S => ES => E + Prepresents what is happening with the enzyme and substrate and products. the second reaction is fast and doesn't really have an equilibrium.55
6371820757How am I supposed to be able to tell the difference between the different types of enzyme inhibition?where does it bind? to the active site or an allosteric site or Enzyme or the ES complex56
6219817093fats-soluble vitamins57
6372157809water versus fats-soluble vitamins58
6219817094FatsLipids non polar used for enery59
63718461153 roles of Lipids in cells1. Energy storage (fatty acids) 2. Cellular organization and structures(cell membrane) 3. Provision of precursor molecules for vitamins and hormones.60
6219817095Fatty acidsthey are fuel for the body and are components of the cell membrane.61
6219818621Three functions of Lipids in the Body1. Energy storage (fatty acids) 2. Cellular organization and structures(cell membrane) 3. Provision of precursor molecules for vitamins and hormones.62
6219819866Feedback inhibitionsNegative feedback stops the output. as product is formed from a process those same products inhibit the formation of more products. many forms of this but prevalent in metabolism. the mechanism in which the end product of a metabolic pathway inhibits an earlier step in the pathway is most precisely described as63
6219819867Glucose pyranose64
6371930149fisher projection of glucose65
6371933174Glucose is always in what form in nature?D-glucose66
6371927374Glucosemain source of energy. Body uses it in Glycolysis and for metabolism and everything. also to store energy.67
6371921673Glucose linear68
6219832517GlycerolA three-carbon alcohol to which fatty acids are covalently bonded to make fats and oils.69
6219832518GlycogenAn extensively branched glucose storage polysaccharide found in the liver and muscle of animals; the animal equivalent of starch.70
6371957560Glycogen connectionsalpha-1,4 linkages(linear) and alpha-1,6 linkages(branches)71
6371972526alpha-1,6 linkages serve what purpose in glycogenthey make branches and aren't able to broken down.72
6371966421Glycogen linkages that can be broken down?alpha-1,4 linkages73
6219833184GlycogonHormone that changes glucose into glycogen moves glucose from cell to blood hormone of pancreas; secreted by alpha cells of islets; promotes hydrolysis of glycogen in the liver and fat in adipose tissue74
6219833185GuaninePurine A component of nucleic acids that carries hereditary information in DNA and RNA in cells. Chemically, it is a purine base.75
6371984360C-G base pair3 bonds76
6219833186Hexoses6 carbon carbohydrates examples are fructose and glucose77
6219835216Hydrogen Bondingthe intermolecular force in which a hydrogen atom that is bonded to a highly electronegative atom is attracted to an unshared pair of electrons of an electronegative atom in a nearby molecule important in DNA and Protein structure and everything in BIOlogy78
6219837363How is h bonding important in DNA, water and what notit gives needed stability and drives reactions and makes surface tension and does everything79
6219838119Hydrolasescatalyze cleavage with the addition of water Chymotrypsin is a protease that cleaves peptide bonds. It is characterized as which of the following classes of enzymes?80
6219838120HydrolysisBreaking down complex molecules by the chemical addition of water Breaking Bonds81
6219839794What does Hydrolysis do to bonds?breaks them with a water molecule.82
6219840485HydrophilicHaving an affinity for water Water loving Polar83
6219840486HydrophobicHaving an aversion to water; tending to coalesce and form droplets in water. non-polar important in protein structure84
6219841502Hydrophobic bonding how it happens and why?This really happens because water has a higher level of entropy when the hydrophobic things are sequestered together so the desire for entropy squishes the hydrophobic molecules together.85
6219842631Why is hydrophobic bonding favorable in an aqueous solutionEntropy of water is higher when hydrophobic molecules are grouped together.86
6219845276Induced Fit modelChange in the shape of an enzyme's active site that enhances the fit between the active site and its substrate(s)87
6372098874GlycoproteinsA protein with one or more covalently attached carbohydrates. Membrane carbohydrates that are covalently bonded to proteins.88
6372098875proteoglycansLong, linear, unbranched polysaccharides attached to protein macromolecules constucted of a protein core which glycosaminoglycans are attached89
6372101964cytochromeshave nonprotein parts like iron (donate/accept electrons, for redox!) are proteins which require a prosthetic heme group in order to function. An iron-containing protein that is a component of electron transport chains in the mitochondria and chloroplasts of eukaryotic cells and the plasma membranes of prokaryotic cells90
6219846081irreversible inhibitorsforms a covalent bond with an amino acid side group within the active site, which prevents that substrate from entering the active site, or prevents catalytic activity91
6219848151what does competitive inhibitors due to a lineweaver plot92
6219849810what does noncompetitive inhibitors due to a lineweaver plot93
6219849811what does uncompetitive inhibitors due to a lineweaver plot94
6219932480what does mixed inhibitors due to a lineweaver plot95
6219935866isomerasescatalyze the rearrangement of bonds within a molecule96
62199368606 types of enzymes1. hydrolases 2. isomerases 3. ligases or polymerases 4. lyases 5. oxidoreductases 6. transferases97
6219938471KmWhat substrate concentration is required to produce 1/2 Vmax?98
6219938472what does Km mean- High KM means a low affinity low Km means a high affinity reflects how well substrate binds to the enzyme99
6219939099Ligasescatalyze condensation reactions coupled with the hydrolysis of high energy molecules catalyze addition or synthesis reactions, generally between large similar molecules, and often require ATP100
6219939100LipidsEnergy-rich organic compounds, such as fats, oils, and waxes, that are made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.101
6219939101Lock and KEy modelEnzymes are specific. The only wok on the substrate that they "fit." Just like a lock has a specific key to open it. The model that states that the shape of an enzyme and that of the reactants is what allows the enzyme to bind specifically and easily to the reactant One type of enzyme fits one type of molecule. Change its shape and the enzyme will no longer work102
6219940203Compare and contrast the Lock and key model and the induced modelThe lock and Key model fits some enzyme models but the more accepted model is the induced model and it says the shapes of both the enzyme and the substrate are altered upon binding.103
6219940204Lyasescatalyze cleavage without the addition of water and without the transfer of electrons catalyze reactions in which functional groups are added to double bonds or, conversely double bonds are formed via the removal of functional groups104
6219941283Michaelis constantit is the Km or 1/2 Vmax.105
6219941284MineralsNutrients that are needed by the body in small amounts and are not made by living things Elements found in food that are used by the body106
6219941728Mixed inhibitors107
6219942479Monosaccharides108
6219942480negative cooperation109
6219945423Difference between negative and positive cooperations110
6219945424Negative Feedback111
6219946597Noncompetitive inhibitors112
6219946598Nucleic Acids113
6219947207Nucleosides114
6219947208Nucleotides115
6219948461A and T how many H Bonds116
6219949219G and C how many H bonds117
6219950360Oxidoreductasescatalyze oxidation-reduction reactions that involve the transfer of electrons118
6219950361Phosphotids119
6219951913Phosphodiester bondsA bond formed between adjacent nucleotides which consists of a phosphate group that links the sugars of two nucleotides120
6219953151phospholipidsA molecule that is a constituent of the inner bilayer of biological membranes, having a polar, hydrophilic head and a nonpolar, hydrophobic tail.121
6219953152Polypeptides122
6219954539Polysaccharides123
6219955192Positive Cooperation124
6219955894Positive feedbackA type of regulation that responds to a change in conditions by initiating responses that will amplify the change. Takes organism away from a steady state. A physiological control mechanism in which a change in some variable triggers mechanisms that amplify the change.125
6219956668Primary Protein Structuresequence of amino acids The first level of protein structure; the specific sequence of amino acids making up a polypeptide chain.126
6376095486protein structure groups picture127
6219957400Proline and secondary and tertiary structuresit adds kicks to the beta pleated sheets and alpha helices so you won't see it ther kinks the chain, thus never found in alpha helix Introduces kinks into the secondary structure-- should not be found in the middle of alpha helices or beta sheets but are good for the turns of beta sheets and the start of alpha helices.128
6219957401ProstaglandinsEicosanoid A group of bioactive, hormone-like chemicals derived from fatty acids that have a wide variety of biological effects including roles in inflammation, platelet aggregation, vascular smooth muscle dilation and constriction, cell growth, protection of from acid in the stomach, and many more.129
6219957812PurinesAdenine and Guanine130
6219957813PyrimindinesThymine and cytosine131
6219959108the difference between Purines and PyrimindinesTwo rings instead of one on purines132
6219959109Quaternary Structures133
6219959848RNA134
6219959849Saturated Fatty acids135
6219960423Saturation Kinetics136
6219961045Secondary structure137
6219961046Side chain138
6219961047R groups139
6219963876single stranded RNA140
6219963877Solvation layer141
6219964759Sphingolipids142
6219964760Starch143
6219965331Structure of starch144
6219965332Steriods145
6219965333SubstratesThe reactants that are affected by enzymes in enzyme-catalyzed reactions. reactants of enzyme-catalyzed reactions146
6219966162Substrate concentration and its effects147
6219966163Sugar-phosphate backbone148
6219967829tertiary Structure149
6219967830Thymine150
6219968680Transferase151
6219969481triacyclglycerols152
6219969482Triglycerides153
6219970226uncompetitive inhibitorsThey bind at a site other than the active site causing a conformational change in the protein154
6219970632Unsaturated Fatty acids155
6219970633Uracilbinds with Adenosine.156
6219970634vitaminsCompounds found in food that help regulate many body processes157
6219970643WaterH2O158
6219971719Water-soluble vitaminsThey are coenzymes b and C vitamins159
6219972664Watson-crick modelthe 3D model of DNA DNA double helix consists of 2 nucleotide strands held together by hydrogen bonds between bases160
6219972665waxesA type of lipid molecule consisting of one fatty acid linked to an alcohol; functions as a waterproof coating on many biological surfaces such as apples and other fruits.161
6219974057VmaxThe maximum rate of an enzymatic reaction, attained immediately after the addition of substrate at a concentration sufficient to fully occupy the active sites of all enzyme molecules present.162
6219974058zymogenAn inactive precursor of an enzyme, activated by various methods (acid hydrolysis, cleavage by another enzyme, etc.) A protein that is an inactive precursor of an enzyme163
6219975264why are zymogen's importantit allows for protein activation when you needed and also allows for activation of the protein in certain circumstances so when the protein is needed it is activated.164

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