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AP Lang Review Session Quiz 2 Flashcards

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5308753099logosAppeal to logic0
5308753100pathosAppeal to emotion1
5308753101moodthe prevailing atmosphere of a work2
5308755346tonethe author's attitude towards his/her subject or audience.3
5308755347personaThe fictional mask or narrator that tells a story4
5308755348anecdoteA short narrative detailing particulars of an interesting episode or event.5
5308757588figurative languageWriting or speech that is not intended to carry literal meaning and is usually meant to be imaginative and vivid6
5308757589flashbackA narrative technique that allows a writer to present past events during current events, in order to provide background for the current narration7

AP Language & Composition Schemes List Flashcards

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5778631674ParallelismSimilarity of structure in a pair or series of related words, phrases or clauses; emphasizes similarities and connections Example: ...for the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Protection, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, our sacred Honor (The Declaration of Independence)0
5778631675Antithesisthe juxtaposition of contrasting ideas, often in parallel structure. Emphasizes dissimilarities and contraries; produces the quality of an aphorism. Example: Though studious, he was popular; though argumentative, he was modest; though inflexible, he was candid; and though metaphysical, yet orthodox (Samuel Johnson on the Reverend Zachariah Mudge, 1769)1
5778631676Anastropheinversion of the natural or usual word order, which surprises expectation and gains attention, though its chief function is to secure emphasis. Example: Backward run the sentences, till reels the mind.2
5778631677Parenthesisinsertion of some verbal unit in a position that interrupts the normal syntactical flow of the sentence. Allows the author's voice to be heard commenting or editorializing, thereby charging the statement with emotion. Example: But wherein any man is bold--I am speaking foolishly--I also am bold... Are they ministers of Christ? I--to speak as a fool--am more. (St. Paul, 2 Corinthians: 11, 21, and 233
5778631678Appositionplacing side by side two coordinate elements, the second of which serves as an explanation or modification of the first. Less intrusive than parenthesis, it allows for the insertion of additional information or emphasis. Example: John Morgan, the president of the Sons of the Republic, could not be reached by phone.4
5778631679AsyndetonDeliberate omission of conjunctions between a series of related clauses. Produces a hurried rhythm in the sentence. Example: I came, I saw, I conquered. (Julius Caesar)5
5778631680PolysyndetonDeliberate use of many conjunctions. Suggests flow or continuity in some instances, special emphasis in others. Example: This semester I am taking English and history and biology and mathematics and sociology and physical education.6
5778631681AnaphoraRepetition of the same word or group of words at the beginnings of successive clauses. Always used deliberately, this scheme helps to establish a marked rhythm and often produces strong emotional effect. Example: The Lord sitteth above the water floods. The Lord remaineth a King forever. The Lord shall give strength unto his people. The Lord shall give his people the blessing of peace. (Psalm 29)7
5778631682EpistropheRepetition of the same word or group of words at the ends of successive clauses. Sets up a pronounced rhythm and secures a special emphasis. Example: I'll have my bond! Speak not against my bond! I have sworn an oath that I will have my bond! (Shylock in Merchant of Venice)8
5778631683ClimaxArrangement of words, phrases, or clauses in an order of increasing importance. Example: Renounce my love, my life, myself--and you. (Alexander Pope, "Eloisa to Abelard")9
5778631684AntimetaboleRepetition of words, in successive clauses, in reverse grammatical order. Produces the impressive turn of the phrase typical of an aphorism. Example: One should eat to live, not live to eat. (Moliere, L'Avare)10
5778631685ChiasmusReversal of grammatical structures in successive phrases or clauses (literally, "the criss-cross"). Like antimetabole, but without the repetition. Example: By day the frolic, and the dance by night (Samuel Johnson, "The Vanity of Human Wishes")11
5778631686Periodic Sentencehas the main clause or predicate at the end. This is used for emphasis and can be persuasive by putting reasons for something at the beginning before the final point is made. It can also create suspense or interest for the reader.12
5778631687Loose Sentencetype of sentence in which the main idea (independent clause) is elaborated by the successive addition of modifying clauses or phrases.13

Classical Civilizations: Greece and Rome Flashcards

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6887477228Greece Geography-Balkan Peninsula -isolated valleys -rugged coast -rocky islands0
6887482791greek government-small city-states emerged -city-states fought to remain independent -sea-travel was essential; became skilled sailors around 750 BCE, a more organized form of the city-state emerged-the polis or major town and surrounding countryside -On top of the hill stood the acropolis or high city here, marble temples were dedicated to the gods -fairly small population in each city-state -citizens, free residents, shared responsibility for governing and protecting the city-state1
6907639818between 750 BCE and 500 BCE most city-states had a monarchy..rule by a king2
6907641683Oligarchiesgovernment by a small group of powerful individuals, replaced some aristocracies3
6907648782Aristocraciesgovernment by wealthy landowners, replaced many monarchies4
6907666847In ancient greece the government are city states. At first each city state was ruled by a___________ then replaced by ____________ then took over by ____________monarchy then aristocracies then oligarchies5
6907673359Spartan government-Spartans developed a brutal system of control over their slave population -Sparta had to train and maintain a powerful army because the slave population outnumbered them -the Spartan government had two kings and a council of elders -an assembly of all male citizens approved all decisions6
6907680059describe what spartans did to young boys-sickly newborn children were abandoned to die in order to raise only a strong warrior class -at age seven, boys moved out of their homes and into the military barracks for training -they were treated harshly, fed very little and encouraged to steal extra food, but severely punished if caught! -this created a military unmatched by any other city-state7
6907685960Describe what men and women did in sparta-men may marry at 20, but remain in the barracks until 30 when they join the assembly -women went through rigorous training to raise strong children8
6907690507Why didn't sparta partake in the arts?-Spartans isolated themselves from other city-states -they had little use for the arts, travel or new ideas -focused on war9
6907695694Athen's government-developed a democracy -more people granted citizenship and more power given to the Athenian assembly -eventually, more power was taken away from the aristocracy -Athens used a limited-democracy -women had fewer rights and couldn't vote or join the assembly -slaves and peasants were not citizens10
6907695695Democracygovernment ruled by the people11
6907699382Who changed athens into a democracy?Solon12
6907707290Under whom did the athenian assembly turned into a legislature?Pisistratus and Cleithenes13
6907710148Legislaturelaw making body14
6907719305Greek Mythology and Religon-polytheistic -chief god was Zeus -gods lived atop Mount Olympus -many buildings and festivals honored the gods15
6907726271Common Language of greeks-most Greek city-states shared the same language -Greeks traded and exchanged ideas with neighbors such as Egyptians and Phoenicians -the Greeks called foreigners barbaroi16
6907734151barbaroipeople who did not speak Greek17
6907745662How far did the Persian Empire stretch?had a vast empire stretching from Asia Minor (Turkey) to India.18
6907749079Darius Ithe Persian ruler during the Persian wars19
6907752085The Persian warsIonian city-states rebelled against Persia, a series of conflicts between the Achaemenid Empire of Persia and Greek city-states that started in 499 BC and lasted until 449 BC.20
6907762889Who sent ships to help the Ionian city-states?The Athens21
6907767003Describe what Darius I did in the Persian wars-Darius I, sent a huge force to punish Athens for interfering -in 490 BCE, Darius landed his forces at Marathon, a plain north of Athens -Athens defeated the much larger Persian force22
6907770409Battle of Marathon23
6907774075Darius I's sonXerxes24
6907777963Battle of Salamis-Darius died before sending another attack force in 480 BCE, his son, Xerxes, sent a much larger force to conquer Greece -his army burned Athens, but the city had been evacuated -the new Athenian Navy lured the Persian navy into the narrow strait of Salamis and sank Xerxes' navy through unifying, the Greek city-states ended the Persian threat25
6907783435The Age of Pericles-"Golden Age" for Athens after the Persian Wars -the Delian League was formed to unite many city-states against future attack -they instituted direct democracy -they began using a jury system -ostracism became a form of punishment26
6907787085from 460 BCE to 429 under Pericles,the economy of Athens thrived and they became more democratic27
6907795556The Peloponnesian War-many Greeks outside of Athens resented Athenian domination of the Delian League -Sparta and other allies formed the Peloponnesian League -in 431 BCE war broke out between Sparta and Athens; it lasted for 27 years -Athens couldn't use its powerful navy to attack Sparta because it was inland -Sparta marched north and surrounded Athens -Pericles allowed all citizens to move within the city walls of Athens which led to overcrowding and plague -Pericles died from the plague -Sparta captured Athens in 404 BCE and destroyed their fleet and empire28
6907799002What League did Athens create under their golden age?Delian League29
6907807602During the Peloponnesian War What League did the Spartans make?the Peloponnesian League30
6907817859What happened after the Peloponnesian war?the Peloponnesian War led to the downfall of Athens, but also opened the door for a conqueror from the north to sweep in and take control31
6907830710Socrates-his teachings seemed to go against traditional Athenian customs -at age 70, he was convicted of corrupting the youth of Athens and sentenced to death32
6907836476What is the Socratic Method and who created it?Socrates, a process of asking questions to people to get them to analyze their answers33
6907838569Plato-student of Socrates -fled Athens for 10 years after death of Socrates was suspicious of democracy -returned to set up a school called the Academy he wrote, The Republic -he described the ideal state and rejected democracy because it condemned Socrates -he wanted the government to be ruled by a philosopher-king34
6907849931Aristotle-Plato's student -was suspicious of democracy -opened school called the Lyceum -was tutor to Alexander the Great35
6907854104Aristotle said this"moderation in all things"36
6907863195the Parthenon,a temple built in honor of the Greek goddess Athena37
6907867063greek Literature-dramas: the most famous writers of tragedies were Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides -These stories told the tale of human suffering. -comedies: These were humorous plays that mocked people or customs. Aristophanes was the most famous writer of comedies. -History: Herodotus was the "Father of History".38
6907873595Alexander and the Hellenistic Age-Alexander's father, Philip II, ruled Macedonia, a rugged mountainous kingdom north of Greece -In 338 BCE, he completed his conquest of Greece -his dream was to conquer the Persian empire, but he was assassinated at his daughter's wedding39
6907879275The Empire of Alexander the Great-conquered Egypt on his way to Persia, establishing Alexandria as the new capital -conquered Persia in 331 BCE -Made it to India in 326 BCE, but retreated to regroup his tired forces -He died of a fever in 323 BCE leaving the three main parts of his empire Greece, Egypt, and Persia, to three different generals40
6907892451HellenismAlexander's desire to blend eastern and western cultures41
6907896590The Legacy of Alexander-Alexander's most lasting achievement was the spread of Greek culture -many new cities were founded, mostly named after Alexander -he filled them with Greek art and statues -people assimilated, or absorbed, Greek culture -Greek settlers in these cities learned the customs of the local people42
6907900514Pythagoras:formulated the relationship of the sides of a right triangle43
6907902129Euclid:wrote a textbook that became the basis for modern geometry44
6907903618Archimedesmastered the use of the lever and pulley45
6907905069Hippocratesfamous Greek physician, modern oath for doctors named after him46
6907921624Geography of early rome-jumble of plains, river valleys, hills/mountains -The alps and the apennines -more open for unification -center of mediterranean world -fertil plain47
6907941424Latinssettled along Tiber River, surrounding villages formed Rome, became known as Romans48
6907944352Greek Colonists-lived along Adriatic coast49
6907946347Etruscansmostly from Northern Italy, ruled much of Italy for a time50
6907948825Romans learned a lot from Etruscans-use of the arch, alphabet, engineering Romans drove them out in 509 BCE51
6907953645republicrepresentative form of government52
6907956947senatea law-making body called53
6907958463patriciansupper class landowners54
6907959624Roman government-Made up of patricians, senate, republic -there were two consuls, or leaders who would control the military and supervise government they would only serve for one year and have to approve each other's decisions -this established a policy of checks and balances a dictator would be appointed in times of war and have to give up the position once their duty was over55
6907968839Twelve Tables of Law-in 450 BCE, laws of Rome inscribed on 12 tablets set up in the Forum, Rome's marketplace -first time Roman laws were written for all to see plebeians could now appeal judgements handed down by Patrician judges56
6907973693Punic Wars-from 264 BCE-146 BCE, there were three wars between Rome and Carthage -Punic is the Latin word for Phoenician the war was over control of the Mediterranean region -First Punic War was a victory for Rome; they won Sicily, Corsica, and Sardinia -Second Punic War featured the great Carthaginian general, Hannibal, marching war elephants across the Pyrenees Mts. and Alps to attack Rome from the north -Carthage lost when Hannibal had to rush his forces back to Carthage to defend against a Roman invasion57
6907980071The Republic Declines in Rome-by 133 BCE, Rome's power in the Mediterranean stretched from Spain to Asia Minor -incredible wealth through trade and taxes increased Rome's power -plebeians suffered as slaves replaced them in the work force -civil wars followed -generals became more and more powerful as their soldiers gave them extreme loyalty in exchange for the shared riches from conquest58
6907988813Who emerged during the decline of republic in rome?Julius Caesar emerged as a great general and leader during this turmoil59
6907998281Describe the conflicts between Julius Caesar and Ponpey-after conquering Gaul, a rival general, Pompey, persuaded the senate to disband Caesar's legions -Caesar ignored the order and crossed the Rubicon River into northern Italy -civil war broke out -Caesar crushed Pompey and his supporters -he made the senate make him a dictator60
6908004759Describe the rule under Julius Caesar-builds more public works -grants more citizenship to non-Romans -creates Julian calendar -his enemies plotted against him because they feared he would seek to end the republic -he was murdered on March 15, 44 BCE in the senate -new civil wars and power struggles began61
6908008148Who was marc Antony and Octavian?Marc Antony, Caesar's chief general and Octavian, Caesar's grandnephew hunted down his murderers, but fought against each other in a struggle for power62
6908016744Battle of Actiumin 31 BCE, Octavian finally defeated Antony and his ally, Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt63
6908019362Octavian becomes Augustus, the first emperor of Rome64
6908023685under Augustus, the 500-year-old republic came to an end Augustus provided for-stable government -civil service -self-government in the provinces -created a census -postal service -new coins -new roads and temples65
6908029358Pax Romana-The time period between Roman emperors Augustus and Marcus Aurelius became known as the "Roman Peace" -Roman rule brought peace, order, and prosperity to the empire which stretched from Britain in the west to the Euphrates River in the east -roads were built and maintained, trade flourished, cultural diffusion, spread of Hellenistic culture, the Silk Road brought goods from China and the Far East66
6908038690Roman Achievement-adoption of Hellenistic culture -new Greco-Roman civilization from blend trade and travel during Pax Romana helped spread this new civilization -engineering: aqueducts, the wealthy had water piped in, public baths, bridges, harbors67
6908045635The Rise of Christianity in rome-originated in 1st century CE -Life and teachings of Jesus -spread by followers, initially among Jews -message appealed to the poor -Roman roads helped spread the religion -Christians were persecuted for not worshipping emperor -Emperor Nero, blamed great fire on Christians in 64 CE -Emperor Constantine adopted Christianity in 312 CE -he passes Edict of Milan, granted freedom of worship to all citizens of the empire68
6908050785The Fall of Rome-Pax Romana ended after the death of Marcus Aurelius in 180 CE -political violence became common-26 Emperors in 50 year period -high taxes, loss of farmland -military-weakened Roman legions, use of mercenaries -political-lost support of people, too authoritarian, corrupt officials, civil wars over succession, Eastern Empire didn't help Western Empire -economic-heavy taxes, overuse of slave labor, abandonment of farmland, disappearance of middle class, population decline due to war and disease -social-decline in patriotism, change in upper class from devoted patrons to greedy aristocracy69
6908055324Diocletian-In 284, Diocletian divided empire into two parts: Eastern Empire, Western Empire. He ruled the Eastern, while Maximilian ruled the West. Diocletian ruled the much richer half70
6908057756In 312, Constantinemoved the eastern capital to Byzantium and changed the name to Constantinople he tolerated Christianity and converted71
6908067621Germanic Tribes-When the Huns invaded eastern Europe from central Asia, many Germanic tribes were forced to flee into Roman territory to seek protection -these Germanic tribes eventually take control of much of Rome's territory -by the 5th century, Rome lost Britain, France and Spain -in 476, Odoacer ousted the last emperor from Rome (Romulus Augustulus)72

Classical Civilization India Flashcards

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7338054343What conclusions can be drawn from evidence at Atanja and Ellora in central India of several different and competing religions, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism all being in close proximity to each other?Dramatic evidence of intensity of the religious feement shaoed all aspects of Indian life as a result of the challenges to the exhisting brahmical. They mirrored the adoption of rituals, objects of worship, basic beleifs by thhe adherence of different Indian religions in this era.0
7338054344What nomadic group moved into India following the fall of the river valley civilization at Harappa?Aryan invaders1
7338054345Give an example of a restriction that helped strengthen social classes in India.Vedic priests, or Brahmins, emerged as the dominant force in Indian society and culture. As Brahmin power increased, forces were building Indian society that threatened the course of civilization developed in South Asia.2
7338054346What famous religious figure challenged older Indian religions beliefs?Buddha3
7338054347What two dynasties/empires are formed during this period of Indian history?The Mauryas and Gupta4
7338054348What 2 major world religions is India best known for?Hinduism and Buddhism5
7338054349Difference #1 between India and China...India: religion and China:Politics6
7338054350Difference #2 between China and India...India:social structures supporting Hinduism China:social structures supporting Confucianism7
7338054351Difference #3 between India and China...India:less cohesive political culture than China. China: larger cohesive political culture than India8
7338054352Similarity #1 between India and China...Most people were peasant farmers9
7338054353Similarity #2 between India and China...Peasant families clustered together for aid and protection10
7338054354Similarity #3 between India and China...Patriarchy11
7338054355Similarity #4 between India and China...Built great cities and engaged in extensive trade12
7338054356What was China able to avoid influences from the Middle East and the Mediterranean region when India was not?China was more isolated13
7338054357What famous conqueror invaded India from the Mediterranean work and what culture did he spread?Alexander the Great; Hellenistic culture14
7338054358What problem(s) does India's diverse separate regions and topography cause for India's unity?India was marked by great diversity that China's Middle Kingdom; racial and language differences15
7338054359How does this compare/contrast with China?Was marked by greater diversity than China's Middle Kingdom16
7338054360Discuss "monsoons" and identify their positive and negative benefits to Indian agriculture.Positives: crucial for farming, produce abundance, could plant and harvest two cracks and support a sizable population Negatives: sometimes bring too little rain or too late, famine, drought, bring catastrophic floods, starvation17
7338054361Where are Aryans from and what is another name for them?Also called Indo European; from Central Asia18
7338054362Why were Aryans more productive farmers that original inhabitants of northern India? (Especially when Aryans were originally nomadic herders)Aryans used iron tools to clear away he dense vegetation; hunting and herding.19
7338054363Who originally developed the Vedas?Aryans20
7338054364In what language were the Veda eventually recorded?Sanskrit21
7338054365What was the basic topic of the Vedas?Literary epics, poems, hyms22
7338054366The Aryans also developed and imposed social classes, or Varanas, on India's population. What was this social system called?The Kshatriyas23
7338054367What are the five basic varanas (social classes) ?1) Brahmins 2) Kshatriya 3) vaisya 4) Sudra 5) untouchables24
7338054368Who were Brahmins?Priestly class teachers25
7338054369What are Kshatriya?Red/courage/warriors/ rulers26
7338054370What are Vaisya?Yellow wealth farmers, merchants, artisans27
7338054371What are Sudra?Black/ignorance/labor28
7338054372What are untouchables?Outside the varna system, no color and not associated with Pursha; pollutes labor29
7338054373What determines which caste you belonged to?Hereditary with distinctive occupations and each tied to its social system30
7338054374Was it possible to move between castes? Why or why not?No, marriage between castes was forbidden and punishable by death31
7338054375We're the Aryans monotheistic and polytheistic?Polytheistic32
7338054376Why do Greeks, the Scandinavians and the Aryans have such similar gods?They were derived from a common Indo-European oral heritage33
7338054377The religions beliefs of the Aryans developed into what dominate religion in India to this day?A vigorous, complex religion:Hinduism and Buddhism34
7338481874What famous southeastern European invaded India in 327 BCE and what state did he establish there?Alexander the Great; state called Bactria35
7338481875What Indian dynasty was founded following the invasion mentioned above?Mauryan Dynaty36
7338481876Ashoka and Kanishaka's impact on the Buddhist faith...Ashoka: sent Buddhist missionaries to the Hellenistic Kingdoms in the Middle East and Sri Lanka to the south; used human behavior; improved trade and communication which encouraged growing commerce. Kanishaka: hurt the religion's popularity in India by associating it with foreign rule, collapse of Kushan state added another 100 years of political instability37
7338481877What follows there end of both the Mauryan and Gupta empires in India and what similarity exists in the origins of these events?Classical India alternates between widespread empires and network of smaller kingdoms. Both economic and cultural life advance in the periods under Mauryas and Guptas.38
7338481878Methods of political control used by the Gupta's...Claimed they had been appointed by the gods to rule, created a demanding taxation system, allowed local rulers to maintain regional control as long as they deferred to Gupta dominance, stationed a personal representative at each rulers court to ensure loyalty.39
7338481879What was the impact of so many differing regional languages on any Indian political structure?Guptas' imposed no single language and promotes Sanskrit, which was the language of the educated people. It made no dent in the sieve rusty of popular, regional languages40
7338481880What was the most important and effective system that organized and governed the people of India's daily lives?Uniform las codes (caste system)41
7338481881How did merchants in India enjoy a rested social stays than merchants in China?They had the opportunity to get an upward mobility in the cards by their own greater wealth through success in economic activities appropriate to the caste42
7338481882What 2 major world religions developed in India?Hinduism and Buddhism43
7338481883Which of those two dominates India today?Hinduism44
7338481884Relationship of Hinduism and Buddhism to other religions...Produced a civilization that would retain fleas continuity and cultural cohesiveness45
7338481885How is Hinduism different from all other world religions?No single founder; no central figure46
7338481886What for Hindus refer to their own religion as?Dharma47
7338481887Define "guru"The mystics48
7338481888Define "reincarnation"souls do not die when bodies do but pass into other beings either human or animal49
7338481889Dharma's basic obligations...Serving the family; producing livelihood; earning money; serving in the army when the need arises50
7338481890How does Hinduism provide hope to people in the lowest caste?If they behaved well, they might be rewarded by communion with the divine soul51
7338481891Why are priests not very important to buddhists?Buddhist denied the spiritual value not only of cards and the performance of rituals, but of priests too52
7338481892Define Kamasutra:Manual of "the laws of love"; discusses relationship between men and women53
7338481893Identify classical Indian achievements in science...Length of solar year; improved math measurements; circumference of the earth, believed it was around; daily rotation around earth; predicted and explained eclipses; theory of gravity; identified 7 planets54
7338481894Why do wee refer to our numbering system in the West as the "Arabic" system if it was created in India?Europeans imported it second hand from the Arabs55
7338481895Classical Indian achievements...Calculated square roots, computed value of pi more accuracy than Greeks, concept of negative numbers56
7338481896How did castes impact economic life?Assigned people to occupation and regulated marriages57
7338481897How did castes impact social life?Low caste individuals has few legal rights and were abused by masters58
7338481898How were Indian families sim to Chinese families?Dominance of husbands and fathers; limited women rights; arranged marriage59
7338481899Propose behind marriages...To ensure economic links with child brides contributinv dowries of land and domestic animals to the ultimate family estates60
7338481900How was the patriarchal family different in India than in China?Indian culture featured clever and strong willed women and goddesses and contributes to women's status as wives and mothers61
7338481901What key technology were the Indians best at?Chemistry; iron making62
7338481902What material was first manufactures in India that became a key staple of the American South?Cotton cloth; calico; cashmere63
7338481903What did Tamil traders get from the Middle East and Roman Empire?Pottery, wine, metals, some slaves, gold64
7338481904What body of water was key to Indian trade?The Indian Ocean65
7338481905Who used the Indian Ocean?Indian merchants and missionaries66
7338481906What other Jody if water was a key trading linkage during this period?The Mediterranean Sea67
7338481907How did India influence China?Through Buddhism and Art68
7338481908What connection lies between Buddhism and Christianity?Moral Rights69
7338481909How were European of. E medieval period more like classical Indians than modern European Ms and other Westerners?Beliefs in human equality or equality of opportunity70
7338481910How were China and India different?Chinese: art and poetry were restraint, opted for separate religions and philosophical systems, political structures and values were little echo in India, greater stress on purely practical findings. India: more dynamic sensual styles, settled on primary religion, carat system involves social rigidity greater than China's, ventured into math71
7338481911How were China and India similar?Interests in pragmatic discoveries; held on larger peasant class, organized in close unit villages with much mutual cooperation; political power primary with those who controlled land; power of husbands and fathers in family patriarchy72
7338481912Most common product shipped form any port in India...Gold73
7338481913First product listed from islands of Southeast Asia...Silk74
7338481914Map divided into 3 zones for trading routes...Arab zone, Indian zone, Chinese zone75

AP English Language & Composition Exam Details Flashcards

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4763738316Three essaysHow many essays are there in the free response section of the exam?0
476374472552-55 questionsHow many multiple choice questions will there be?1
47637451293 hours, 15 minutesHow long is the AP Lang exam?2
476374547145%How much of your grade is the multiple choice worth?3
476374565755%How much of your grade is the essay in the free response section worth?4
47637464351 hourHow much time will you have for the multiple choice section of the exam?5
47637470522 hoursApproximately how much time will you have to complete all three of the essays in the free response section?6
476374724215 minutesHow long is the (suggested) reading period for the exam?7
476374865640 minutesHow long will you have to complete each of the three essays in the free response section?8
47809519965What is the highest you can score on the AP test overall?9
47809540639What is the highest you can score on your free response essay?10
4780955320Analytical/Argument, synthesis, and rhetorical analysisWhat are the three types of essays in the free response?11
4949504520Analytical/Argument free response essayIn what essay is it "okay" to use personal pronouns (I, you, we, us)?12
4949512408Synthesis and rhetorical analysis essaysIn what essays is it not "okay" to use personal pronouns (I, you, we, us)?13

First Global Civilization: Rise and Spread of Islam Flashcards

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8620401659ArabsSemitic people in Southwest Asia0
8620401660Bedouinnomadic pastoralists; inhabitants of the Arabian peninsula; organized into tribes1
8645960483Meccathe holiest city of Islam; Muhammad's birthplace; known for its trading system that linked the Mediterranean to east Asia2
8645960484Medinaa city in western Saudi Arabia; a city where Muhammad preached; agricultural and commercial city3
8645968199true or false; women did not have any roles in the Islamic Civilizationfalse; women played key economic roles4
8620401661In terms of religion, the Arabs were ____________polytheistic5
8620401662Allahsupreme god of Islam who presides over community of spirits; all powerful being who created the universe and everything in it6
8645960485true or false; men and women were equal in the eyes of Allahtrue7
8620401663Ka'abacentral shrine in Mecca housing a massive black meteorite that is believed to possess sacred qualities8
8645686451What was the significance of the Ka'aba?it attracted pilgrims and visitors9
8620401664Why did the Arab peninsula possess economic importance?it was geographically situated to be in control of certain trade routes10
8620401665Because of the Arab peninsula's economic importance, what was a result?political disorder in Mesopotamia, wars between the Byzantine and Sassanian (Persian) Empire in Egypt11
8620401666Muhammadfounder of Islam; prophet of Allah12
8620401667According to tradition, what troubles Muhammad?the growing gap between Bedouin values of honesty & generosity and the acquisitive behavior of affluent commercial elites of the Mecca13
8620401668Who appears to Muhammad?the Angel Gabriel14
8620401669What does Angel Gabriel tell Muhammad?he commands Muhammad to preach revelations he will be given15
8620401670When Muhammad preaches to Mecca, what is the city's response?Mecca is convinced he is a madman/ charlatan (con-man)16
8620401671Why is Mecca incensed by Muhammad's preachings?Muhammad is preaching monotheistic beliefs to polytheistic followers17
8645973858Why does Mecca see Muhammad as a threat?his faith endangered the gods of the Ka'aba18
8620401672hegiraMuhammad's journey from Mecca to Yathrib19
8645979240The hegira was so important that...its date marked the first year of the Islamic calendar20
8620401673How does Yathrib react to Muhammad?they invite him even though he preaches monotheistic beliefs; they see him as a good meditator of disputes among clans21
8620401674true of false; the Bedouins around Yathrib support Muhammadtrue22
8620401675What does Muhammad do when he returns to Mecca?he arrives with a military force, conquers and converts the town people, declares Ka'aba a sacred shrine of Islam23
8620401676true of false; Islam is a monotheistic religiontrue24
8620401677true or false; Muhammad is divinefalse; Muhammad is NOT divine25
8620401678What is the heart of Islam?the Quran/Koran/Qu'ran26
8620401679Quransacred book written in Arabic language27
8620401680What is the basic message of the Quran?"There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his prophet"28
8620401681What is contained in the Quran?messages that Muhammad said he received from Allah29
8620401682What are the 5 pillars of Islam?Belief, Prayer, Charity, Fasting, Pilgrimage30
8620401683What is granted to those who follow the 5 Pillars of Islam?eternal paradise31
8620401684The 5 Pillars of Islam are not just a set of religious beliefs, but ...a way of life as well32
8620401685Sharialaw code that provides believers with ways to regulate daily life33
8620401686What is a problem that happens as a result of Muhammad's death?Since Muhammad had no sons (only had daughters), he left behind no successor34
8620401687Abu Bakrfirst caliph after death of Muhammad; father in law of Muhammad35
8620401688caliphsuccessor of Muhammad36
8620401689Mu'awiyafirst Umayyad caliph; capital at Damascus, Syria37
8620401690What important thing did Mu'uawiya do?he made the caliph position HEREDITARY; he chose his son, Yazid, to succeed him38
8620401691Shi'itesthose who believed Ali was the right caliph of Muhammad39
8620401692What did the Shi'ites believe in terms of the first three caliphs?the Shi'ites believed the first three caliphs were FALSE since they were not blood-related to Muhammad40
8620401693Alicousin and son-in-law of Muhammad41
8620401694SunnisMuslims who SUPPORT the first 3 caliphs and the Umayyads42
8620546717What places did the Arabs gain victory?Mesopotamia, North Africa, & Persia43
8620546718What are two reasons of rapid expansion of Arab?1) Prolonged drought on Arab peninsula 2) Desire of Islam to channel the energies of new converts44
8620546719What was the true reason for Mecca's expansion?Mecca, comprised mostly of merchants, wanted to expand trade routes and bring surplus producing regions under their control45
8620546720What role do the Bedouins play in the expansion of Arab?they have strength and mobility due to calvary46
8620546721What leads to the Byzantine and Persian empire weakening?ongoing conflicts47
8620546722What do the warriors believe?if they die in battle they will automatically be granted a place in paradise48
8620546723The Arab government was left to ______ after the warslocal officials49
8620546724true or false; the Arabs convert people to Islam by forcefalse; the Quran states that "there shall be no compulsion in religion" (there will be no force conversion)50
8620546725What happens if people don't convert to Islam?they must pay a head tax in return for exemption from military service requires for all Muslim males51
8620546726true or false; there is slavery of non-Muslimstrue52
8620546727true or false; local population are angry with Arab control and would much rather prefer Byzantine or Persian rulefalse; the local population believes Islam is a simple and egalitarian religion; although people are polytheistic, they are "attracted" to the equalness of monotheism53
8646022934Why were the Muslims able to easily conquer the Sassanian Empire?-already weak due to ongoing conflicts with Byzantine Empire -Bedouins had strength and mobility due to calvary54
8646022935Why did the Byzantines lose so easily to the Arabs?Byzantine Christian sects rallied / fought on the Arab side55
8620546728What dynasty does Mu'awiya start?the Umayyad dynasty56
8620546729When the Muslims invaded France what did Charles Martel do?he defeated the Muslims in the Battle of Tours57
8620546730What is the significance of the Battle of Tours?if Charles Martel didn't successfully stop the Muslim army from advancing, Europe would be Christian today- it would be Islam58
8620546731When the Muslims attack Constantinople, what does the Byzantine Empire do?they use Greek Fire to destroy the Muslim fleet and the build a "wall"59
8620546732What do the Umayyad caliphs do in terms of behavior?they are "rebels" ; they eat pork, gamble, drink alcohols, engage in dishonesty60
8620546733Who overthrows the Umayyad dynasty?Ab al Abbas, descendant of Muhammad's uncle (Abbasid Dynasty)61
8645681087What makes Islam "attractive?"-uncompromising monotheism -highly developed legal codes -egalitarianism -strong sense of community -simple and direct character62
8645681088What made rapid Arab conquests possible?-Muslim fleets -did not force people to convert -Byzantine & Sassanian Empires already had ongoing conflicts63
8645681089What was the important of social bonds within tribes?Due to the harsh environment, it was key to survival to develop and establish good relations with surrounding tribes in times of dire need64

Chapter 6: The Classical Period: Directions, Diversities, and Declines by 500 c.e. Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5049643607AxumKingdom located in Ethiopian highlands; replaced Meroë in first century CE; received strong influence from Arabian peninsula; eventually converted to Christianity.0
5049643608EthiopiaA Christian kingdom the developed in the highlands of Eastern Africa under the dynasty of King Lalibela; retained Christianity in the face of Muslim expanision elsewhere in Africa.1
5049643609SaharaDesert running across northern Africa; separates the Mediterranean coast from southern Africa.2
5049643610ShintoismReligion of early Japanese culture; devotees worshipped numerous gods and spirits associated with the natural world; offers of food and prayers made to gods and nature spirits.3
5049643611Civilizations of Central and South AmericaThree cultural hearths are represented: Mesoamerica, extending from north-central Mexico to Nicaragua; the Andean region in South America, and the Intermediate zone of modern-day Colombia and Panama, which shared many characteristics with the other zones but did no build in stone.4
5049643612TeotihuacanSite of classic culture in central Mexico; urban center with important religious functions; supported by intensive agriculture in surrounding regions; population of as much as 200,000.5
5049643613MayaClassic culture emerging in southern Mexico and Central America contemporary with Teotihuacan; extended over broad region; featured monumental architecture, written language, calendrical and mathematical systems, highly developed religion.6
5049643614IncaGroup of clans centered at Cuzco that were able to create empire incorporating various Andean cultures; term also used for leader of empire.7
5049643615PolynesiaIslands contained in a rough triangle whose points lie in Hawaii, New Zealand, and Easter Island.8
5049643616Yellow TurbansChinese Daoists who launched a revolt in 184 CE in China promising a golden age to be brought about by divine magic.9
5049643617SuiDynasty that succeeded the Han in China; emerged from strong rulers in northern China; united all of northern China and reconquered southern China.10
5049643618TangDynasty that succeeded the Sui in 618 CE; more stable than previous dynasty.11
5049643619HarshaRuler who followed Guptas in India; briefly contructed a loose empire in northern India between 616 and 657 CE.12
5049643620RajputRegional princes in western India; emphasized military control of their religions.13
5049643621DeviMother goddess within Hinduism; widely spread following collapse of Guptas; encouraged new emotionalism in religous ritual.14
5049643622IslamMajor world religion having its origin in 610 CE in the Arabian peninsula; meaning literrally submission; based on prophecy of Muhammad.15
5049643623DiocletianRoman emperor from 284 to 305 CE; restored later empire by improved administration and tax collection.16
5049643624ConstantineRoman emperor from 312 to 337 CE established second capital of Constantinople; attempted to use religious force of Christianity to unify empire spirituality.17
5049643625Germanic Kingdoms After the InvasionsNomadic tribes converged mainly on the western part of the Roman empire, invading Rome and its European outposts.18
5049643626Byzantine EmpireEastern half of the Roman empire following collapse of western half of old empire; retained Mediterrarnean culture, particularly Greek; later lost Palestine, Syria, and Egypt to Islam; capital at Constantinople.19
5049643627Augustine(Saint)Influential church father and theologian (354-430CE) born in Africa and ultimately bishop of Hippo in Africa; champion of Christian doctrine against various heresies and very important in the long-term development of Christian thought on such issues as predestination.20
5049643628The Mediterranean, Middle East, Europe, and North Africa500CE, Soon after the fall of Rome, the former empire split into three distinct zones.21
5049643629CopticChristian sect in Egypt, later tolerated after Islamic takeover.22
5049643630MahayanaChinese version of Buddhism; placed considerable emphasis on Buddha as god or savior.23
5049643631BodhisattvasBuddhist holy men and women; built up spiritual merits during their lifetimes; prayers even after death could aid people to achieve reflected holiness.24
5049643632Jesus of NazarethProphet and teacher amoung the Jews; believed by Christians to be the Messiah; executed 30CE.25
5049643633PaulOne of the first Christian missionaries; moved away from insistence that adherents of the new religion follow Jewish law; use of Greek in language of Church.26
5049643634PopeBishop of Rome; head of the Christian Church in western Europe.27
5049643635Council of NicaeaChristian council that met in 325CE to determine orthodoxy with respect to the Trinity; insisted on divinity of all persons of the Trinity.28
5049643636Benedict of NursiaFounder of monasticism in what had been the western half of the Roman Empire; established Benedictine Rule in the 6th century; paralleled development of Basil's rules in Byzantine empire.29

AP English Language Midterm Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
8306299101Count NounA large number of something that can be counted (number of people)0
8306300878Mass NounA massive amount of something that can not be counted (amount of water)1
8306301722Concrete Nounhave an immediate, often sensory experience, and physical objects (heat and Power points)2
8306306820Abstract Nounrefer to qualities and ideas (justice, beauty, love)3
83063106269 types of pronounsSubject, Object, Possessive, Intensive, Reflexive, Indefinite, Relative/Interrogative, Demonstrative, Reciprocal4
83063146505 forms of a verbinfinitive, past tense, past participle, present participle, -s form5
8306330666What types of pronouns can function as adjectives?Possessive, demonstrative, and indefinite pronouns6
8306334127Articles function as:adjectives7
8306334744Adjective questionsHow much/How many?, Which one?, What kind of?8
8306335258Adverb questionsWhen? Where? How? Why? Under what conditions? To what degree?9
8306338308Not and never are:adverbs10
8306339985Prepositional phrases function as:adjectives or adverbs11
8306342029Types of conjunctionsCoordinating and Subordinating12
8306342706Coordinating Conjunctionsused to connect grammatically equal elements (FANBOYS)13
8306343832Subordinating conjunctionsused to introduce a subordinate clause; indicates its relation to the rest of the sentence14
83063510658 parts of speechNoun, Pronoun, Verb, Adjective, Adverb, Conjunction, Preposition, Interjection15
83296571734 sentence structuresSimple, Compound, Complex, Compound-Complex16
8329658440Phrasea word group lacking one or more elements (such as a subject or predicate) that would make it a complete sentence17
8329660859Clausea word group that features both a subject and a predicate18
8329661941Subjectthe name of the person, place, thing, or idea (noun) that the sentence is about19
8329664091Predicatethe grammatical term used to identify in a sentence the verb and its objects, complements, and modifiers20
8329665773Independent Clausea clause containing a subject and a predicate. It can stand alone as a complete sentence.21
8329669571Subordinate Clausea clause containing a subject and a predicate but it functions within a sentence as an adjective, advertising, or a noun. It can not stand alone.22
8329676852Simple SentenceOne independent clause (1 subject verb combination)23
8329680891Compound SentenceTwo independent causes joined together using either a semicolon or a comma and coordinating conjunction24
8329685974The 7 coordinating conjunctionsFANBOYS (For, and, nor, but, or, yet, so)25
8329690889Complex SentenceOne independent clause with at least one subordinate clause26
8329693137Compound-Complex SentenceTwo independent clauses and at least one subordinate clause27
8329711488Complete Subjectconsists of the simple subject and any words modifying the simple subject28
8329714578Simple Subjectalways a noun or pronoun29
8329860348Compound subjecttwo or more simple subjects joined wit a coordinating conjunction (and, or)30
8329864618Subjects in Imperative Sentencesimplied "you"31
8329873306Subjects in "There is" or "There are" statementssubject follows the verb32
8329874121Part of speech of "there"expletive (an empty word that has no part of speech)33
8329879867Subjects in inverted sentencessubject follows the verb34
8329889179Subjects in questionscan be before the verb, after the verb, or between the helping verb and the main verb35
8362974491Transitive Verbfollowed by direct object36
8362974493Intransitive Verbfollowed by a subject complement, an adverb, or nothing37
8363015633Object complementword or word group that completes an object's meaning by renaming or describing it38
8363047025When the object complement renames the direct object, it is:a noun or pronoun39
8363051569When the object complement describes the direct object, it is:an adjective40
8363060818Types of subject complementsPredicate adjectives and predicate nominatives41
8363072919Predicate AdjectiveAdjective phrase consisting of just an adjective or an adjective modified by any number of adverbs42
8363091070Predicate Nominativesnoun phrases that follow intransitive verbs43
8363113352Are linking verbs transitive or intransitive?intransitive44
8363113353Linking verbsconnect subject to its subject complement45
8363154737Types of Subordinate PhrasesPrepositional Phrase, Appositive Phrase, Verbal Phrase46
8363170882Prepositional phrasebegin with preposition and end with noun or noun equivalent47
8363183665What does a prepositional phrase function as?An adjective or an adverb48
8363203467Appositive Phrasesdescribe nouns or pronouns by renaming them (noun or noun equivalent)49
8363244576Verbalverb form that does not function as a verb (infinitives, present participles, past participles). Can function as an adjective, noun, or adverb50
8363244581Verbal PhraseVerbals with objects, complements, or modifiers51
8363267440Gerund Phrasespresent participles that function as nouns52
8363291777Participial phrases function as:adjectives53
8363528524Infinitive Phrasesfunction as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs54
8370143556Sentence TypesPeriodic, Cumulative, Inverted55
8370145413Periodic SentenceBegins with subordinate element56
8370145414Cumulative SentenceBegins with subject57
8370146964Inverted Sentencesubject verb object word order is jumbled58
8370149564Sentence PurposesDeclarative, Interogative, Imperative, Exclamatory59
8370159080Relative Pronounswho, whom, whose, which, that60
8370159081Demonstrative PronounsThis, that, those, these61
8370161283Indefinite pronounssome, all, none, nothing, something62
8370166452Plural Subject PronounsWe, You, They63
8370203475Singular Subject PronounsI, you, he, she, it64
8370213052Object PronounsMe, You, Him, Her, It, Us, Them65
8370225600Intensive/Reflexive PronounsMyself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves66
8370232060Possessive PronounsMine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs67
8370255719Reciprocal Pronounsone another, each other68

Greece and Rome Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
7572045990Tiberriver Rome was located on...0
7572051904Carthagecivilization in North Africa that Rome fought a series of wars against1
7572055466AthensGreek city state known for being the beginning of democracy2
7572060350Spartamilitaristic Greek city-state3
7572072442HellenisticThe form of Greek culture that emerged after Alexander's conquests4
75720840201st Punic WarRome wins, over trade in Sicily, Rome vs. Carthage5
75720906632nd Punic WarRome eventually wins, Hannibal crosses Alps and invades Italian Peninsula6
75720954733rd Punic WarCato calls for Carthage to be destroyed by the Romans, Rome destroys Carthage and salts the Earth7
7572117705Romulusone of the twin brothers who according to legend founded Rome8
7572122760Patriciansupper class people in Rome9
7572128238Plebeiansmiddle class people in Rome10
7572129988Spartacusname of the Slave who led to the 1st century BC rebellion11
7572137856Persian Warsseries of wars fought between the Greek city-states and Persians12
7572149228Peloponessian WarAthens and its allies vs. Sparta and its allies, Sparta wins, big plague in Athens at this time13
7572154054Latiumplain in central Italy where Rome was built14
7572164532Ostiaport city on the Tiber river near Rome15
7572169814ByzantiumEastern Capital of the Roman empire16
7572177523Gaulpresent day France; Julius Caesar commanded legions here17
7572182531PompeiiRoman city buried by a volcanic explosion18
7572185587PolisGreek term for city-states19
7572187580Acropolis"high city," hilltop fortress building in Greece20
7572196464Delian Leaguedefensive alliance of Greek city-states; headed up by Athens21
7572204814Caesar Augustusformer name Octavian; winner of Civil War vs. Marc Antony after the 2nd Triumvirate22
7572219896Julius Caesarmade dictator for life by the Senate after crossing the Rubicon and winning a civil war after the 1st Triumvirate ended23
7572230612Nero1st century Roman emperor who had many killed and persecuted Christians, especially after a fire in Rome24
7572254110Tiberiusemperor of Roman when Jesus was crucified25
7572257188ConstantineRoman emperor who first converted to Christianity26
7572275797AristotlePlato's student, taught Alexander the Great27
7572280507Socrates1st major Greek philosopher; "Father of Philosophy"28
7572298767Platowrote the Republic; student of Socrates29
7572300844Homerblind Greek poet, wrote Illiad and the Odyssey30
7572309815Hippocrates"Father of Medicine," earliest physician31
7572317457DiocletianRoman emperor who divided the Roman empire into 2 districts: East and West32
7572323941HannibalCarthage general during the 2nd Punic Wars; known for using war elephants33
7572365361Marcus AureliusLast of the "Good emperors"34
7572370430HadrianRoman emperor who carried out a number of building projects, including a wall in Northern Britain to keep Scots out35
7572384512Marc Antonymember of 2nd Triumvirate, lost civil war versus Octavian36
7572409439Ostrogoths and Visogothsgroup who sacked Rome for 3 days in 410 AB37
7572411456Attilaleader of the Huns38
7572413234Romulus AugustulusLast Roman emperor in 476AD39
7572417816Vandalsgroup from North Africa who invaded Rome; name means "one who causes senseless destruction"40
7572423382OdoacerBarbarian king who captured Rome in 476 AD41
7572459578ForumRome's public meeting place; center of Roman political life42
7572463466Senatelaw making body in Rome43
7572468963Republictype of government in Rome, people elect representatives44
7572483248Dictatorperson given power in Rome during a time of crisis; Cinncinatus was this45
7572491430Censusmeasuring the population of a place; often for tax purposes46
7572513537Vetomeans "I forbid," consuls in Rome could override a law47
7572517278Consulstwo officials elected from the Senate to administer laws48
7572520492Council of the Plebslegislative body which spoke for Plebeian rights49
757252497312 TablesRome's first code of laws50
7572527913Pax Romanaextended period of Roman peace51
7572531805Pontius PilateRoman leader who ordered the execution of Jesus52
7572553493TheodosiusRoman emperor who made Christianity the official religion53
7572555323Apostlesone who is sent out; early messengers of Christianity54
7572563604JesusSon of God; died on a cross for the sins of humanity55
7572569158MarathonAthens versus Persia; 26.2 miles from Athens, Athens win56
7572597013Thermopylae300 Spartans hold off Persians at a mountain pass57
7572599823Trojan warMycenaeans vs. Troy; early Greek war58
7572605252Philosopher"lover of wisdom"59
7572607909HelotsGreek term for Slaves60
7572610067Agoramarketplace in Greece61
7572612417HoplitesGreek foot soldiers62
7572614291PhalanxGreek fighting formation63

AP World History-- INDIA Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5087780092what two rivers are located in india?Ganges, Indus0
5087786535when is the monsoonmay to september1
5087793509how much rain falls during may to september?85%2
5087799590in may to september, which direction does the monsoon flow?northwest3
5087804847where was the harappan civilization located?the Indus river valley4
5087812324what was the harappan civilization established?3000 bc5
5087820079when did the harappan civilization disappear?1700 bc6
5087826015when did the indo-aryans migrate to india?15007
5087832668how did the indo-aryans get into india?over the the hindu kush mountains8
5087837068what is the aryan word for 'river'?sindu9
5087839351what does 'aryan' mean?of noble birth/race10
5087919154how many holy books are in the vedas?411
5087922074what did the aryan word for war mean?desire for more cows12
5087930090how did the aryans pass down their religion?word of mouth13
5087933060what form of writing did the aryans develop?sanskrit14
5087937450what was the end of the vedas called?the upanishads15
5087946661the vedic religion formed the basis of modern _______hinduism16
5087953241what was the aryan chief called?the Rajah17
5087956214when was the vedic age?1500-1000 bc18
5087965085when was the epic age?1000-500 bc19
5087983423what was the war fought between two tribes on the banks pf the ganges river?the mahabarata20
5087987053what was the Lord's song (dialogue between krishna/warrior)Bhagavad Gita21
5087998174what is the most sacred text in Hinduism next to the vedas?the Bhagavad Gita22
5088011643what is the story of prince rama and princess sita?the ramanyana23
5088017305readers of the vedas were restricted to the ______upperclass24
5088024710how many people practice hinduism400 million+25
5088032165what are the 6 basic beliefs of hinduism--unity of all living things (brahman) --noninjury of all living things (ahimsa) -- many gods/goddesses are all faces of one true spirit (ie Brahma--creator, Vishna--preserver, Shiva--destroyer) --transmigration of souls (reincarnation) --spiritual law of the universe--good=good, bad=bad (karma) --ultimate goal in life is union with brahma (moksha) --belief in work without worrying about results26
5088068623what is the unity of all living things called?brahman27
5088070806what is the noninjury of all living things calledahimsa28
5088072973who is brahmathe creator29
5088072974who is vishnathe preserver30
5088074639who is shivathe destroyer31
5088078682what is the transmigration of souls calledreincarnation32
5088080917what is being one with brahma calledmoksha33
5088083385what is the spiritual law of the universekarma34
5088087744which jobs did the aryans take in the caste systemwarriors/merchants/priests/farm owners35
5088093698which jobs did the dravidians get in the caste systemfarmers/animal herders/servants/artisans36
5088102019how were jobs gotten in the caste system?fathers passed their jobs to their sons37
5088106175what are the four caste levels by 500bc?--brahmans--priests/teachers of religion --kshatrias--rulers/warriors --vaisyas--farm owners/merchants --sudras--farmers/servatns/herders38
5088123432what jobs did the brahmans have in the caste system?priests/teachers of religion39
5088128511what jobs did the kshatrias have in the caste system?rulers/warriors40
5088133284What jobs did the vaisyas have in the caste system?farm owners/merchants41
5088138056what jobs did the sudras have in the caste system?farmers/servants/herders42
5088153629how many castes developed from the original four?over 200043
5088183269who founded buddhism?siddhartha gautma44
5088187489why is there pain/suffering in the world?--life is full of pain and suffering --pain/suffering are caused by selfish desire --you can end suffering when you end your desire --the way to end suffering is through the eightfold path45
5088224722what is the eightfold path--right view --right thought --right speech --right conduct --right livlihood --right effort --mindfulness --right concentration46
5088239038what is right viewthink through the eyes of buddha (ie w/ wisdom/compassion)47
5088245279what is right thoughtwe are what we think; good thoughts make good character48
5088251901what is right speechspeak kindly/nicely and people will trust you49
5088256989what is right conductlook at yourself before you criticize others, be nice50
5088260423what is right livlihoodchoose a job that doesn't hurt others51
5088286895what is right effortdo ur best @ all times52
5088290383what is mindfulnessbe aware of your words/actions & how they affect others53
5088298055what is right concentrationfocus on only one thing at once, be quiet in urself54
5088300182what is the ultimate goal of buddhismnirVANNA55
5088305531how does one obtain nirvannaby getting rid of all selfish desires56
5088312459buddhism broke away from ___________hinduism57
5088315041what is the difference between religion and philosophygods/vs no gods58
5088317608what is a stupaa sacred mound in buddhism59
5088321629what is theravadaa stricter form of buddhism, the original teachings60
5088326437who founded jainismmahavira61
5088355842when was jainism founded5th century bc62
5088365775how did jainism integrate the caste system?they rejected it63
5088371519what moral beliefs did jains holddoN;T KILL ANYHTIGN, NOT EvEN A BUG64
5088421213When did alexander the great live???????????????!?320 bce65
5088436985who drove alexander the great out of india?Chandragupta Murga66
5088443727what part of india was the Mauryan empire in?Northern india67
5088446267when did the mauryan empire reach its height?under Asoka68
5088455183who wrote the first known handbook on ruling a large empire?Kautilya (adviser to Chandragupta Murga)69
5088478515who established the mauryan empire?Chandragupta Murga70
5088482324when did the mauryan empire fall?232 bce71
5088485986where were the three kingdoms of tamilsouthern india72
5088488311how did the three kingdoms of tamil interactthey fought a lot73
5088493515how long was india in turmoil after the collapse of the mauryan empire?like 500 years74
5088502703when was the golden age of hinduism?during the gupta empire75
5088507080who brought on the gupta empireChandra__Gupta76
5088520321wwhen was the second classic age?during the GUPTA EMPIRE77
5088524681who brought down the gupta empirethe Hunas (from asia, cousins of the huns)78
5088533841what spread indian culture/religion (ESPECIALLY BUDDHISM) throughout asia?the silk road (ie trade)79
5088542616WhAT did india trade for other goods?cotton/gems/spices80
5088548937what goods did india import?gold/silk/horses81
5088555382what sciences came from asia?banking /astronomy82

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