AP Notes, Outlines, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Practice Exams and more!

Eastern Civilizations Unit Test Prep Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
2353559866Indus RiverSupported many civilizations located in Western Asia by the Thar Desert and Mauryan and Gupta empires (Indian empires)0
2353559867Harrapa/Mohenjo-DaroCivilizations along the Indus. Alphabet has yet to be deciphered. Emerged around 2500 BCE.1
2353559868Huanghe (yellow) RiverIsolated River prone to floods and home to the Huange civilization started by P'an Ku2
2358509049Shang DynastyShang kings ruled over the Huange valley and built impressive tombs and palaces3
2358511598Zhou DynastyTook over from Shang around 1000 BCE4
2358514040HimalayasMountain range north of India that provided passes that linked India to civilizations in the Middle East5
2358516938MahabharataIndia's greatest epic poem written sometime between 1000 and 600 BCE. Reflected on a more settled agriculture and better organized political units6
2358521958ChandraguptaRuler of Mauryan Dynasty as a young soldier around 322 BCE and was first of the Mauryan dynasty rulers7
2358525133MonsoonVery windy and rainy weather8
2358526160RamayanaAnother of India's epic poems9
2358527475Mauryan dynastyFirst ruled by Chandragupta and located along the Ganges River that borrowed from Persian political models10
2358531245Aryan(Indo-European) originally from Central Asia11
2358536407UpanishadsEpic poems with more religious flavor during the epic age ( 1000-600 BCE)12
2358539340AsokaChandraguptas grandson (269-232 BCE) was a governor of two provinces and engaged in a study of nature13
2358543479SanskritFirst literary language of the new Aryan culture14
2358545178VarnasAryan social classes. Established a social period that determined where you work, who you marry, etc.15
2362087123DharmaThe law of moral consequences. what Asoka believed in16
2362095422VedasFirst Sacred books written in Sanskrit.17
2362098507UntouchablesPeople confined to certain jobs such as transporting dead bodies or hauling refuse18
2362106221Gupta DynastyEstablished a large empire beginning in 320 CE two centuries of Gupta rule gave classical India it's greatest stability. Overturned in 535 CE by the Huns19
2362118809Rig-VedaThe first epic-poem containing 1028 hymns dedicated to the Aryan gods and composed by various priests.20
2362125875NirvanaA world beyond existence itself. People could regulate their lives and aspirations toward this goal without elaborate ceremonies.21
2362136867GurusMystics- a spiritual teacher in Hinduism and Buddhism22
2362146512StupasShrines Asoka sponsored for Buddha along with statues for him.23
2362153453ReincarnationThe belief that people didn't actually die when they died, but their soul would go on to live in another human or animal.24
2362160204PolytheismThe belief in or worship of more than one God.25
2362161976BuddhaSiddhartha Gautama who is more well known as Buddha or "the enlightened one". Lived as a Hindu mystic, fasting and torturing his body and after 6 years felt he had found the truth and traveled to spread his ideas26
2362175452Dao(ism)The philosophy that every feature is balanced by an opposite (yin and yang) and to relate to this harmony, one should seek a way called Dao.27
2362187286QinImperial dynasty ruled by Shi Huangdi that promised to bring an end to strife. He was thought to be a tyrant.28
2362203948Middle KingsomExpanded settlement from the Huange to the Yangtze became China's core.29
2362208739Shi HuangdiBrutal ruler of the Qin, builder of the Great Wall. Rules until 210 BCE30
2362213775Mandate of HeavenZhou rulers asserted that heaven had transferred its mandate to rule China to the Zhou emperors. This concept of Mandate of Heaven remained a key justification for Chinese imperial rule from the Zhou onward.31
2362220840Great wallBuilt under the rule of Shi Huangdi by peasants. Built to guard against invasions and protect Shi Huangdis own expansionist drives.32
2362226050Han DynastyLasted over 400 years (until 220 CE) rounded out China's basic political and intellectual structure.33
2364329936ConfuciousUndertook a lifelong quest to become the chief advisor to a ruler who possessed the vision and skills to restore centralized control, peace, and order. Named Kung Fuzi34
2364361885LaoziLived in the 5th century BCE and stressed that nature contains a divine impulse that directs all life (Daoism)35
2364367598PatriarchalRelating to a system of society or government controlled by men (Confucianism). Men were superior36
2364377151Great Silk RoadRoads used to trade silk and other luxury products through Central Asia. Under the Han, the Chinese gov. Actively encouraged this trade with regions in the west37
2364384601BodhisattvasDoctrine of people that held that some people could attain nirvana through their own meditation while choosing to remain in the world as saints and to aid others by prayer38
2364396440MahayanaThe East Asian form of Buddhism (also called the greater vehicle) that retained the basic Buddhist beliefs. The emphasis on Buddha being a savior was greater.39
2364404462Chan/ZenAnother variation of Buddhism that stresses on meditation and the appreciation of natural and artistic beauty while Zen had a great appeal for the educated classes of China40
2364409826Empress Wu(690-705) supporter of Buddhist establishment (woman) who once tried to elevate Buddhism to the status of a state religion.41
2364418427Chinese OrthodoxConfucianism, Daoism, and Legalism42
2364425776ConfucianismAdvocates rule by highly educated exclusively male groups. Sought to establish norms for all aspects of Chinese life from relationships within families that stressed respect for ones elders, male authority, etiquette for rulers and subjects and the importance of art, music, and elegant calligraphy43
2364456374LegalismHuman nature for legalists was evil and required restraint and discipline. The army would control and the people would labor. The idea of pleasures in educated discourse or courtesy was dismissed as frivolity.44
2364473287DaoismWorld of balanced nature. Yin and yang represented the balance between opposites, and one should appreciate this balance.45

Eastern Civilizations Vocab (cumulative) Flashcards

asdfjkl

Terms : Hide Images
26574080EmissaryA messenger sent to represent the interests of another0
26574081Zhang QianFather of the silk road1
26574082Han DynastyOne of the greatest Chinese dynasties2
26574083Central Asia5 "stan" countries between the Caspian Sea and China3
26574084ByzantiumIstanbul4
26574085LamaA Tibetan or Mongolian Buddhist monk5
26574086SteppeA semi-arid grassy plain6
26574087KhanLike an emperor, but title of a Mongol ruler7
26574088TartarOne of the many steppe tribes, now often synonymous with Mongol8
26574089Moghul EmpireA Muslim dynasty in India (1500-1800's) of Mongol origin (1200's)9
26574090CathayAncient name for China used by the westerners10
26574091ConscriptionForced military service11
26574092MeritocracySystem of promotion based on skill not $ or friends12
26574093SageA profoundly wise person13
26574094ShahAn Islamic king, often from Persia or Iran14
26574095SubjugateTo conquer and subdue15
26574096CaliphChief mongol civil and religious leader16
26574097ArabSomeone who can trace her ancestry to the tribes of Arabia, someone whose language is Arabic (disputed definition) Cultural not religious17
26574098GendarmeAn armed police officer18
26574099MuezzinThe one who calls Muslims to prayer 5x a day19
26574100MinaretTall spires on the mosques (like a steeple on a church)20
26574101SultanMuslim leader of ottoman21
26574102HaremThe living quarters for women, the women available to the sultan22
26574103The Western WallThe only remaining wall of the second temple- holy to Judaism.23
26574104SepulcherTomb cut into a rock or stone24
26574105Dome of the RockTheir first work of art, think that's where Abraham sacrificed his son, when Muhammad died that's where he raised to heaven25
26574106ZionFor Jews Israel, Christians- Jerusalem26
26574107DiasporaThe scattering, dispersion, of any people from their original homeland27
26574108GentileOne who is not of the dominant religion, not Jewish28
26574109Pogrom"devastation" in Russian; an organized, often officially encouraged massacre or persecution of a minority group, especially against Jews. Often sanctioned by the government29
26574110CzarA Russian emperor30
26574111ZionismA political and cultural movement (org.) to create a national homeland for Jews in Palestine31
26574112Gaza StripPalestinian territory bordered by Israel and Egypt. Governed by the Palestinian authority from the west bank and the hamas party. One and a half million people. Has refuge states by UN economy is highly dependant on Israel32
26574113HamasMeans "zeal" in Arabic Islamic Palestinian movement and political party elected in 2006; refuses to recognize israel's right to exist has an extrensive social service, has a terrorist wing33
26574114Palestinian AuthorityThe name of the govt for Palestinians HQ= in west bank34
26574115Fertile Crescentcrescent shaped area of fertile land that extends from the eastern mediterranean coast through the valley of the tigris and euphrates rivers the persian gulf35
26574116SherifA muslim ruler36
26574117PersiaPresent day Iran37
26574118MullahA Muslim learned in Islamic theology and sacred law; sometimes function the way our mayors do38
26574119MajlisIran's parliament39
26574120AyatollahMeans "sign of god" is a learned, prestigious scholar who has a significant following; inspires, writes, teaches, highest honor in Shia branch40
26574121ClericA priest or religious leader in any religion41
26574122ClergyThe body of all people ordained for religious duties42
26574123TheocracyGov't by a god regarded as the ruling power or by official claiming divine sanction43
26574124FundamentalistA person who has rigid adherence to religious principles and is often intolerant of other views, often opposes secularism44
26574125RamadanThe ninth month of the Muslim year, during which strict fasting is observed from sunrise to sunset45
26574126Martial LawMilitary gov't that suspends ordinary law46
26574127BedouinA nomadic Arab of the desert47
26574128MesopotamiaGreek word meaning land between the rivers48
26574129Ziggurata rectangular step temple tower49
26574130SumeriansThe first people to build cities and invent legal system, justice code, weapons, writing etc.50
26574131AtrocityAn extremely wicked or cruel act51

AP Macroeconomics: Unit 1 Flashcards

AP Macroeconomics Unit 1 Terms for studying

Terms : Hide Images
1007178015economicsThe social science concerned with the efficient use of scarce resources to achieve the maximum satisfaction of economic wants0
1007178016economic perspectiveA viewpoint that envisions individuals and institutions making rational decisions by comparing the marginal benefits and marginal costs associated with their actions.1
1007178017marginal analysisComparisons of marginal benefits & marginal costs2
1007178018scientific methodThe procedure for the systematic pursuit of knowledge involving the observation of facts and the formulation and teasing of hypotheses to obtain theories, principles and laws3
1007178019theoretical economicsThe process of deriving and applying economic theories and principles4
1007178020principlesStatements about economic behavior or the economy that enable prediction of the probable effects of certain actions5
1007178021generalizationsStatements of the nature of the relationship between two or more sets of facts.6
1007178022other-things-equal assumptionThe assumption that factors other than those being considered are held constant. Economists use this to construct their generalizations.7
1007178023policy economicsThe formulation of courses of action to bring about desired economic outcomes or to prevent undesired occurrences.8
1007178024tradeoffsThe sacrifice of some or all of one economic goal, good, or service to achieve some other goal, good, or service.9
1007178025macroeconomicsThe part of economics concerned with the economy as a whole10
1007178026aggregateA collection of specific economic units treated as if they were one unit.11
1007178027microeconomicsThe part of economics concerned with such individual units as industries, firms, and households and with individual markets, specific goods and services, and product and resource prices.12
1007178028positive economicsThe analysis of facts or data to establish scientific generalizations about economic behavior. Focuses on facts and cause-and-effect relationships13
1007178029normative economicsThe part of economics involving value judgments about what the economy should be like; focused on which economic goals and policies should be implemented; policy economics.14
1007178030fallacy of compositionThe false notion that what is true for the individual (or part) is necessarily true for the group (or whole).15
1007178031"after this, therefore because of this" fallacyThe false belief that when one event precedes another, the first event must have caused the second event.16
1007178032economizing problemThe choices necessitated because society's economic wants for goods and services are unlimited but the resources available to satisfy these wants are limited (scarce).17
1007178033utilityThe want-satisfying power of a good or service; the satisfaction or pleasure a consumer obtains from the consumption of a good or service.18
1007178034economic resourcesThe land, labor , capital and entrepreneurial ability that are used in the production of goods and services; production agents; factors of production.19
1007178036landNatural resources ("free gifts of nature") used to produce goods and services20
1007178037capitalHuman-made resources used to produce goods and services; goods that do not directly satisfy human wants; also called capital goods.21
1007178038investmentSpending for the production and accumulation of capital and additions to inventories.22
1007178039laborPeople's physical and mental talents and efforts that are used to help produce goods and services23
1007178040entrepreneurial abilityThe human resource that combines the other resources to produce a product, makes nonroutine decisions, innovates, and bears risks.24
1007178041factors of productionEconomic resources: land, capital, labor, and entrepreneurial ability.25
1007178042full employmentThe use of all available resources to produce want-satisfying goods and services26
1007178043full productionEmployment of available resources so that the maximum amount of (or total value of) goods and services is produced; occurs when both productive efficiency and allocative efficiency are realized27
1007178044productive efficiencyThe production of a good or service in the least costly way28
1007178045allocative efficiencyThe production of that particular mix of goods and services most wanted by society; the output of each product at which its marginal cost and marginal benefit are equal.29
1007178046consumer goodsProducts and services that satisfy human wants directly.30
1007178047capital goodsHuman-made resources used to produce goods and services; goods that do not directly satisfy human wants; also called capital.31
1007178048production possibilities tableLists of different combinations of two products that can be produced with a specific set of resources (and with full employment and productive efficiency)32
1007178049production possibilities curveShows the different combinations of two goods or services that can be produced in a full-employment, full-production economy where the available supplies of resources and technology are fixed.33
1007178050opportunity costThe amount of other products that must be forgone or sacrificed to produce a unit of a product.34
1007178051law of increasing opportunity costsThe principle that as the production of a good increases, the opportunity cost of producing an additional unit rises.35
1007178052economic growthAn outward shift in the production possibilities curve that results from an increase in resource supplies or quality or an improvement in technology36
1007178053economic systemA particular set of institutional arrangements and a coordinating mechanism for solving the economizing problem; a method of organizing an economy, such as market and command37
1007178054market systemAll the product and resource markets of a market economy and the relationships among them; a method that allows the prices determined in those markets to allocate the economy's scarce resources and to communicate and coordinate the decisions made by consumers, firms, and resource suppliers38
1007178055capitalismAn economic system in which property resources are privately owned and markets and prices are used to direct and coordinate economic activities.39
1007178056command systemA method of organizing an economy in which property resources are publicly owned and government uses central economic planning to direct and coordinate economic activities; command economy.40
1007178057resource marketA market in which households sell and firms buy resources or the services of resources.41
1007178058product marketA market in which products are sold by firms and bought by households.42
1007178059circular flow modelThe flow of resources from households to firms and of products from firms to households. These flows are accompanied by reverse flows of money from firms to households and from households to firms.43
1007178060marketAny institution or mechanism that brings together buyers (demanders) and sellers (suppliers) of a particular good or service.44
1007178061demandA schedule or a curve that shows the various amounts of a product (/resource) that consumers (/businesses) are willing and able to purchase at each of a series of possible prices during a specified period of time.45
1007178062law of demandThe principal that, other things equal, an increase in a product's price will reduce the quantity of it demanded, and conversely for a decrease in price.46
1007178063diminishing marginal utilityEach buyer of a product will derive less satisfaction ( or benefit, or utility) from each successive unit of the product consumed.47
1007178064income effectA change in the quantity demanded of a product that results from the change in real income (purchasing power) produced by a change in the product's price.48
1007178065substitution effectSuggests that at a lower price, buyers have the incentive to substitute what is now a less expensive product for similar products that are now relatively more expensive.49
1007178066demand curveA curve demonstrating demand (its downward slope reflects the law of demand- the inverse relationship between price and quantity)50
1007228223determinants of demandFactors other than price that determine the quantities demanded of a good or service.51
1007228224normal goodsA good or service whose consumption increases when income increases and falls when income decreases, price remaining constant52
1007228225inferior goodsA good or service whose consumption declines as income rises (and conversely), price remaining constant.53
1007228226substitute goodProducts or services that can be used in place of each other. When the price of one falls, the demand for the other product falls; conversely, when the price of one product rises, the demand for the other product rises.54
1007228227complementary goodProducts and services that are used together. When the price of one falls, the demand for the other increases (and conversely).55
1007228228change in demandA shift of the entire demand curve to the left (a decrease in demand) or right (an increase in demand).56
1007228229change in quantity demandedA movement from one point to another point- from one price-quantity combination to another- on a fixed demand schedule or demand curve.57
1007228230supplyThe amount of a good or service that sellers will offer at various prices during some period.58
1007228231law of supplyThe principle that, other things equal, an increase in the price of a product will increase the quantity of it supplied, and conversely for a price decrease.59
1007228232supply curveA curve illustrating supply.60
1007228233determinants of supplyResource prices, technology, taxes and subsidies, prices of other goods, price expectations and the number of sellers in the market.61
1007228234change in supplyA change in the quantity supplied of a good or service at every price; a shift of the supply curve to the left or right.62
1007228235change in quantity suppliedA movement from one point to another on a fixed supply curve. The cause of this is a change in the price of the specific product being considered.63
1007228236surplusThe amount by which the quantity supplied of a product exceeds the quantity demanded at a specific (above-equilibrium) price.64
1007228237shortageThe amount by which the quantity demanded of a product exceeds the quantity supplied at a particular (below-equilibrium) price.65
1007228238equilibrium priceThe price in a competitive market at which the quantity demanded and the quantity supplied are equal, there is neither a shortage nor a surplus, and there is no tendency for price to rise or fall.66
1007228239equilibrium quantity1. The quantity demanded and supplied at the equilibrium price in a competitive market. 2. The profit-maximizing output of a firm67
1007228240rationing function of pricesThe ability of market forces in competitive markets to equalize quantity demanded and quantity supplied and to eliminate shortage and surpluses via changes in prices.68
1007228241private propertyThe right of private persons and firms to obtain, own, control, employ, dispose of, and bequeath land, capital and other property.69
1007228242freedom of enterpriseThe freedom of firms to obtain economic resources, to use those resources to produce products of the firm's own choosing, and to sell their products in markets of their choice.70
1007228243freedom of choiceThe freedom of owners of property resources to employ or dispose of them as they see fit, of workers to enter any line of work for which they are qualified, and of consumers to spend their incomes in a manner that they think is appropriate.71
1007228244self-interestThat which each firm, property owner, worker, and consumer believes is best for itself and seeks to obtain.72
1007228245competitionThe presence in a market of independent buyers and sellers competing with one another and the freedom of buyers and sellers to enter and leave the market.73
1007228246roundabout productionThe construction and use of capital to aid in the production of consumer goods.74
1007228247specializationThe use of the resources of an individual, a firm, a region, or a nation to concentrate production on one or a small number of goods and services.75
1007228248division of laborThe separation of the work required to produce a product into a number of different tasks that are performed by different workers; specialization of workers.76
1007228249medium of exchangeAny item sellers generally accept and buyers generally use to pay for a good or service77
1007228250barterThe exchange of one good or service for another good or service.78
1007228251moneyAny item that is generally acceptable to sellers in exchange for goods and services.79
1007228252Four Fundamental Questions1. what to produce 2. how to produce it 3. how to divide the total output 4. how to ensure economic flexibility.80
1007228253economic costsA payment that must be made to obtain and retain the services of a resource; the income a firm must provide to a resource supplier to attract the resource away from an alternative use; equal to the quantity of other products that cannot be produced when resources are instead used to make a particular product.81
1007228254normal profitThe payments for (cost of) the entrepreneur's contributions.82
1007228255economic profitThe total revenue of a firm less its total costs.83
1007228256expanding industryAn industry whose firms earn economic profits and for which an increase in output occurs as new firms enter the industry.84
1007228257declining industryAn industry in which economic profits are negative (losses are incurred) and that will, therefore, decrease its output as firms leave it.85
1007228258consumer sovereigntyDetermination by consumers of the types and quantities of goods and services that will be produced with the scarce resources of the economy; consumers' direction of production through their dollar votes.86
1007228259dollar votesThe "votes" that consumers and entrepreneurs cast for the production of consumer and capital goods, respectively, when they purchase those goods in product and resource markets.87
1007228260derived demandThe demand for a resource that depends on the demand for the producers it helps to produce.88
1007228261guiding function of pricesThe ability of price changes to bring about changes in the quantities of products and resources demanded and supplied.89
1007228262creative destructionThe creation of new products and production methods completely destroys the market positions of firms that are wedded to existing products and older ways of doing business.90
1007228263"invisible hand"The tendency of firms and resource suppliers that seek to further their own self-interests in competitive markets to also promote the interest of society.91
1010250571Functional Distribution of Incomethe division of national income into wage and salaries, proprietors' income, corporate profits, interest and rent.92
1010250572Personal Distribution of IncomeThe manner in which the economy's personal or disposable income is divided among different income classes or different households or families.93
1010250573Durable goodA consumer good with an expected life (use) of 3 or more years94
1010250574Nondurable GoodA consumer good with an expected life (use) of less than 3 years95
1010250575ServiceAn (intangible) act or use for which a consumer, firm, or government is willing to pay.96
1010250576PlantA physical establishment that performs one or more functions in the production, fabrication, and distribution of goods and services.97
1010250577FirmAn organization that employs resources to produce a good or service for profit and owns and operates one or more plants.98
1010250578IndustryA group of (one or more) firms that produce identical or similar products99
1010250579Sole ProprietorshipAn unincorporated firm owned and operated by one person100
1010250580partnershipAn unincorporated firm owned an operated by two or more persons101
1010250581corporationA legal entity ("person") chartered by a state or the Federal government that is distinct and separate from the individuals who own it.102
1010250582stockAn ownership share in a corporation103
1010250583bondA financial device through which a borrower ( a firm or government) is obligated to pay the principal and interest on a loan at a specific date in the future.104
1010250584Limited liability companyAn unincorporated business whose owners are protected by limited liability105
1010250585Double taxationThe taxation of both corporate net income (profits) and the dividends paid from this net income when they become the personal income of households.106
1010250586Principal-Agent ProblemA conflict of interest that occurs when agents (workers or managers) pursue their own objectives to the detriment of the principals' (stockholders') goals.107
1010250587MonopolyA market structure in which the number of sellers is so small that each seller is able to influence the total supply and the price of the good or service.108
1010250588Spillover benefitA benefit obtained without compensation by third parties from the production or consumption of sellers or buyers. Example: a beekeeper benefits when a neighboring farmer plants clover109
1010250589Spillover costA cost imposed without compensation on third parties by the production or consumption of sellers or buyers. Example: A manufacturer dumps toxic chemicals into a river, killing the fish sought by sport fishers.110
1010250590Exclusion principleThe ability to exclude those who do not pay for a product from receiving its benefits111
1010250591Public goodA good or service that is indivisible and to which the exclusion principle does not apply; a good or service with these characteristics provided by government.112
1010250592Free-rider problemThe inability of potential providers of an economically desirable but indivisible good or service to obtain payment from those who benefit, because the exclusion principle is not applicable.113
1010250593Quasi-public goodA good or service to which the exclusion principle could apply but that has such a large spillover benefit that government sponsors its production to prevent an underallocation of resources.114
1010250594Government PurchasesExpenditures by government for goods and services that government consumes in providing public goods and for public (or social) capital that has a long lifetime; the expenditures of all governments in the economy for those final goods and services.115
1010250595Transfer paymentA payment of money (or goods and services) by a government to a household or firm for which the payer receives no good or service directly in return.116
1010250596Personal income taxA tax levied on the taxable income of individuals, households, and unincorporated firms117
1010250597Marginal tax rateThe tax rate paid on each additional dollar of income118
1010250598Average tax rateTotal tax paid divided by total (taxable) income, as a percentage119
1010250599Payroll TaxA tax levied on employers of labor equal to a percentage of all or part of the wages and salaries paid by them and on employees equal to a percentage of all or part of the wages and salaries received by them.120
1010250600Excise taxA tax levied on the production of a specific product or on the quantity of the product purchased121
1010250601Sales taxA tax levied on the cost (at retail) of a broad group of products122
1010250602Property taxA tax on the value of property (capital, land, stocks and bonds, and other assets) owned by firms and households123
1010250603Fiscal federalismThe system of transfers (grants) by which the Federal government shares its revenues with state and local governments124
1010250604Multinational corporationsFirms that own production facilities in two or more countries and produce and sell their products globally125
1010250605Comparative advantageA lower relative or comparative cost than that of another producer126
1010250606Terms of tradeThe rate at which units of one product can be exchanged for units of another product; the price of a good or service; the amount of one good or service that must be given up to obtain 1 unit of another good or service127
1010250607Foreign exchange marketA market in which the money (currency) of one nation can be used to purchase (can be exchanged for) the money of another nation.128
1010250608Exchange rateThe rate of exchange of one nation's currency for another nation's currency129
1010250609depreciationAn estimate of the amount of capital worn out or used up (consumed) in producing the gross domestic product130
1010250610appreciationAn increase in the value of the dollar relative to the currency of another nation, so a dollar buys a larger amount of the foreign currency ad thus of foreign goods.131
1010250611Protective tariffA tariff designed to shield domestic producers of a good or service from the competition of foreign producers132
1010250612Import quotaA limit imposed by a nation on the quantity (or total value) of a good that may be imported during some period of time.133
1010250613Nontariff barriersAll barriers other than protective tariffs that nations put in place to impede international trade, including import quotas, licensing requirements, unreasonable product-quality standards, unnecessary bureaucratic detail in customs procedures and so on.134
1010250614Export subsidiesGovernment payments to domestic producers to enable them to reduce the price of a good or service to foreign buyers.135
1010250615Smoot-Hawley Tariff ActLegislation passed in 1930 that established very high tariffs. Its objective was to reduce imports and stimulate the domestic economy, but it resulted only in retaliatory tariffs by other nations.136
1010250616Reciprocal Trade Agreements ActA 1934 Federal law that authorized the president to negotiate up to 50 percent lower tariffs with foreign nations that agreed to reduce their tariffs on U.S. goods137
1010250617Most - favored- nation clauseAn agreement by the United States to allow some other nation's exports into the United States at the lowest tariff level levied by the United States, then or at any later time.138
1010250618General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)The international agreement reached in 1947 in which 23 nations agreed to give equal and nondiscriminatory treatment to one another, to reduce tariff rates by multinational negotiations, and to eliminate import quotas. It now includes most nations and has become the World Trade Organization.139
1010250619World Trade Organization (WTO)An organization established in 1994 to replace GATT to oversee the provisions of the Uruguay Round and resolve any disputes stemming from it.140
1010250620European Union (EU)An association of 15 European nation that has eliminated tariffs and import quotas among them, established common tariffs for goods imported from outside the member nations, allowed the free movement of labor and capital among them, and created other common economic policies.141
1010250621Trade blockA group of nations that lower or abolish trade barriers among members. Examples include the European Union and the nations of the North American Free Trade Agreement142
1010250622North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)A 1993 agreement establishing, over a 15-year period, a free-trade zone composed of Canada, Mexico, and the United States143

Enduring Vision Chapter One Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
1143958689AdenaAn early Native American culture centered in the Ohio River valley from about the tenth century B.C. to about the second century A.D., noted for its elaborate burial mounds, and highly developed artistic style.0
1143958690Anasazi cultureThe culture that originated during the first century B.C. in the Four Corners area.1
1143958691Archaic peoplesNative Americans who flourished in the US after 4000 B.C.2
1143958692AztecsThe empire that migrated from the north during the 13th century and settled on the shore of Lake Texcoco as subjects of the local inhabitants.3
1143958693CahokiaArea located near modern St. Louis, Missouri, where about twenty thousand people inhabited a 125-square-mile metropolitan area.4
1143958694chiefdomsPolitical societies in Mesoamerica where the earliest hereditary rulers exercised absolute power over a few closely clustered communities.5
1143958695extended familiesExtension of the nuclear family that included additional relatives.6
1143958696Hohokam cultureThe culture that emerged in the Southwest during the third century B.C., when ancestors of the Akimel O'odham and Tohono O'odham Indians began farming in the Gila and Salt River valleys of southern Arizona.7
1143958697HopewellAn early Native American culture centered in the Ohio River valley from about the second century B.C. to the fourth century A.D., noted for the construction of extensive earthworks and large conical burial mounds and for its highly developed arts and crafts.8
1143958698IncasThe empire that conquered and subordinated societies over much of the Andes and adjacent regions after 1438.9
1143958699Iroquois ConfederacyThe council of chiefs from the Onondaga, Mohawk, Oneida, Cayuga and Seneca Iroquois nations.10
1143958700MesoamericaLand that is now central and southern Mexico and Central America.11
1143958701MississippianAn early Native American culture formed in about A.D. 700 in the floodplains of the Mississippi River and noted for the construction of extensive earthworks and large conical burial mounds, religious ceremonies and for its highly sophisticated arts and crafts.12
1143958702nuclear familiesFamilies that consist of a husband, a wife, and their biological children13
1143958703Paleo-IndiansThe earliest Americans.14
1143958704Poverty PointThe town on the lower Mississippi River that was the center of the Indian communities around 1200 B.C.15
1143958705reciprocityThe mutual bestowing of gifts and favors.16
1143958706statesPolitical societies in Mesoamerica where a ruler or government exercises direct authority over many communities.17
1143958707wampumPurple-and-white shells that laid in the dry lakebed that Hiawatha walked onto.18
1143958708Ancestral Pueblowere an ancient Native American culture centered on the present-day Four Corners area of the United States, comprising southern Utah, northern Arizona, northwest New Mexico, and a lesser section of Colorado. They lived in "houses" called pueblos in which they lifted up ladders when enemies attacked when they came near. best-known for the stone and adobe dwellings built along cliff walls, particularly during the Pueblo II and Pueblo III eras. Adobe structures are constructed with bricks created from sand, clay, and water, with some fibrous or organic material, shaped using frames and dried in the sun.19
1143958709Chaco CanyonAn urban center established by Anasazi located in southern New Mexico. There, they built a walled city with dozens of three-story adobe houses with timbered roofs. Community religious functions were carried out in two large circular chambers called kivas.20
1143958710mound-building culture, and Adena cultureEastern Woodlands societies, which flourished from 1200 B.C.E.-1400 C.E.; included Poverty Point, Adena, Hopewell, and Mississippian21
1143958711Hopewell and Mississippian culturesOhio and Illinois river valleys, ceremonial centers- Larger that Adena some contained 2 0r 3 dozen mounds within an enclosure of several miles squared, Elaborate burial goods, Primarily hunter/Gatherers.22
1143958712Eastern Woodlands peoplesMany eastern Indians established populous villages and complex confederations well before adopting full-time, maize-based farming. Peoples: Iroquois & Algonquians ( grouped because of languages)23
1143958714the Sun DanceA ceremony the Sioux believed help keep the buffalo strong.24

Chapter 4 and 5 Flashcards

"Out of Many - A History of the American People" Sixth Edition *AP Edition

Terms : Hide Images
529763695SlaversA person dealing in or owning slaves.0
529763696Middle PassageThe voyage between West Africa and the New World slave colonies.1
529763697AcculturationThe modification of the culture of a group or individual as a result of contact with a different culture.2
529763698Slave CodesA series of laws passed mainly in the southern colonies in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries to defend the status of slaves and codify the denial of basic civil rights to them.3
529763699MercantilismEconomic system whereby the government intervenes in the economy for the purpose of increasing national wealth.4
529763700Enumerated GoodsItems produced in the colonies and enumerated in acts of Parliament that could be legally shipped from the colony of origin only to specified locations.5
529763701Salutary NeglectAn undocumented, though long-lasting, British policy of avoiding strict enforcement of parliamentary laws, meant to keep the American colonies obedient to England.6
529763702RedemptionerEuropean immigrants who gained passage to America by selling themselves into indentured servitude.7
529763703King William's WarThe first of a series of colonial struggles between England and France; occurred principally on the frontiers of northern New England and New York between 1689 and 1697.8
529763704EncomiendaIn the Spanish colonies, the grant to a Spanish settler of a certain number of Indian subjects, who pay him tribune in goods and labor.9
529763705Half-Way CovenantPlan adopted in 1662 by New England clergy to deal with the problem of declining church membership, allowing children of baptized parents to be baptized whether or not their parents had experienced conversion.10
529763706New LightsPeople who experienced conversion during the revivals of the Great Awakening11
529763707The Toleration ActAct passed in 1661 by King Charles II ordering a stop to religious perfection in Massachusetts.12
529763708EnlightenmentIntellectual movement stressing the importance of reason and the existence of discoverable natural laws.13
529763709Great AwakeningTremendous religious revival in colonial america striking first in the middle colonies an New England in the 1740s and then spreading to the southern clones.14

Ch 5: The Cultures of Colonial North America Flashcards

1700-1780, Out of Many: A History of the American People, 6th edition, APUSH

Terms : Hide Images
1149304978Toleration Actact passed in 1661 by King Charles II ordering a stop to religious persecution in Massachusetts0
1149304979engagésCatholic immigrants to New France1
1149304980encomiendain the Spanish colonies, the grant to a Spanish settler of a certain number of Indian subjects, who would pay him tribute in goods and labor2
1149304981Enlightenmentintellectual movement stressing the importance of reason and existence of discoverable natural laws3
1149304982almanaca combination calendar, astrological guide, and sourcebook of medical advice and farming tips4
1149304983Half-Way Covenantplan adopted in 1662 by New England clergy to deal with the problem of declinin g church membership, allowing children of baptized parents to be baptized whether or not their parents had experienced conversion5
1149304984Congregationalistsmembers of Puritan churches governed by congregations6
1149304985Calvinist theology of predestinationbelief that God has predestined certain individuals to be saved and others to be damned7
1149304986Great Awakeningnorth american religious revival in the middle of the eighteenth century8
1149304987New Lightspeople who experienced conversion during the revivals of the Great Awakening9
1149304988Old Lightsreligious faction that condemned emotional enthusiasm as part of the heresy of believing in a personal and direct relationship with God outside the order of the church10

Ch 4: Slavery and Empire Flashcards

1441-1770, Out of Many: A History of the American People, 6th edition, APUSH

Terms : Hide Images
1149271112Seven Year's Warwar fought in Europe, North America, and India between 1756 and 1763, pitting France and its allies against Great Britain and its allies0
1149271113Middle Passagethe voyage between West Africa and the New World slave colonies1
1149271114slave codesa series of laws passed mainly in the southern colonies in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries to defend the status of slaves and codify the denial of basic civil rights to them2
1149271115Great Awakeningtremendous religious revival in colonial America striking first in the Middle Colonies and New England in the 1740s and then spreading to the southern colonies3
1149271116mercantilismeconomic system whereby the government intervenes in the economy for the purpose of increasing national wealth4
1149271117Queen Anne's Waramerican phase (1702-1713) of Europe's' War of the Spanish Succession5
1149271118King George's Warthe third Anglo-French war in North America (1744-1748), part of the European conflict known as the War of the Austrian Succession6
1149271119enumerated goodsitems produced in the colonies and enumerated in acts of Parliament that could be legally shipped from the colony of origin only to specified locations7

Chapter 4 Terms Flashcards

Textbook: Out of Many- 5th Edition

Terms : Hide Images
510997024Enumerated GoodsItems produced in the colonies that could be legally shipped from the colony of origin, only to specified locations. Grain, flour, meat, and dairy products are not part of these goods.0
510997025White Skin PrivilegeBelief that white-skinned people were better than those with black skin and having black skin was God's curse and was a natural infection.1
510997026MulattoFree people of mixed ancestry of European,Indian, and African. Weren't necessarily enslaved or segregated at first.2
510997027SeminolesSlaves who escaped from South Carolina or Georgia and were of African & Indian descent. Created communities in Spanish Florida.3
5109970281st Families of VirginiaA group of prominent families who led the colonial culture and economy. Jeffersons, Madisons, Washingtons, etc. The elite of farming colonial families, top 1-3% in economy4
511032475MaroonsName for communities established by runaway slaves. Name comes from Spanish word "Cimmaron" meaning "wild & untamed." Located mainly in the back country of the lower south.5
511032476CreoleCountry born slaves, this term was first used by slaves in Brazil to distinguish their children. Born in the new world from newly arrived Africans.6
511032477Society with SlavesBecause slaves had little economic benefit, slaves were among one of the many forms of labor on Virginia and Maryland plantations. Often, indentured servants and slaves worked together, ate, and shared common quarters in the 17th century.7
511032478Fictive KinshipOne of the first methods enslaved Africans used to humanize the world of slavery. These methods included referring to unrelated people as "auntie" or "uncle," or "brother" and "sister" used among slaves of a close age. This created a sense of family linked emotionally rather than by relation.8
511032479Middle PassageOne of the parts of the trading triangle, the voyage between West Africa & the New World slave colonies. Many slaves died during this voyage.9
511032480John HawkinsMan who started the English slave trade in the 16th century with African voyages. He was an English sea dog.10
511032481Anthony JohnsonHe was a master of an indentured servant in a court case where he kept the servant for too long. He himself was of African descent and lived in colonial Virginia.11
511032482Venture SmithAn African born in Guinea in 1729. 8 years old when captured and his village was raided. He watched his father get murdered in the process.12

Out of Many (A History of the American People) Chapter 2 Flashcards

yay chapter 2 lol also parentheses means I am not sure, but I will try to fix them once I go ask Mr. Barry

Terms : Hide Images
1616460395Feudalisma medieval European social system in which land was divided into hundreds of small holdings0
1616460396Renaissancethe intellectual and artistic flowering in Europe during the fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth centuries sparked by a revival of interest in classical antiquity1
1616460397Reconquistathe long struggle (ending in 1492) during which Spanish Christians reconquered the Iberian peninsula from Muslim occupiers2
1616460398Treaty of Tordesillastreaty negotiated by the pope in 1494 to resolve the territorial claims of Spain and Portugal3
1616460399Protestant ReformationMartin Luther's challenge to the Catholic Church, initiated in 1517, calling for a return to what he understood to be the purer practices and beliefs of he early Church4
1616460400Predestinationthe belief that God decided at the moment of Creation which humans would achieve salvation5
1616460401ProtestantsAll European supporters of religious reform under Charles V's Holy Roman Empire6
1616460402*European Society-European states were hierarchical -Most Europeans were peasant farmers -Most Europeans were Christians united under the authority of the Roman Catholic Church7
1616460403*Portuguese Explorations-Prince Henry the Navigator played a key role in sponsoring exploration -Technological innovations made longer sea voyages possible -The Portuguese explored the Atlantic coast of Africa seeking direct access to gold and slaves8
1616460404*Cortes and the Aztecs-Hernan Cortes arrived in Mexico in 1519 -Cortes exploited resentment toward the Aztecs to overthrow their empire -Smallpox outbreaks undermined the Aztecs' ability to resist the Spanish9
1616460405*The Fur Trade-Fur traders were critical to New France's success -Indians were active participants in the trade -In the early seventeenth century, the French made an effort to monopolize the trade10
1616460406**The English colony at Roanoke:mysteriously disappeared within a few years of being established11
1616460407**The key to understanding the events that occurred during the generation after 1492 is:recognizing the transformation Europe experienced in the centuries prior to Columbus's voyage12
1616460408**One critical development in Europe that shaped overseas expansion was:the close relationships between the merging national monarchs and the developing merchant class13
1616460409**Portuguese interest in exploring Atlantic trade routes to the Indies was sparked by:the Ottoman Turks' closing of the lucrative overland silk and spice trade in 145314
1616460410**The military tradition that influenced Spanish attitudes toward expansion was based on the:reconquista15
1616460411**Regarding expansion, Columbus and the Spanish:were driven by the desire to create an empire16
1616460412**According to the journal of Christopher Columbus, the natives he found:could quickly become Christians because they had no religion of their own17
1616460413**During the 1500s:the Spanish empire in America created a society based on African, European, and Indian cultures18
1616460414**Critical to the success of the Hernan Cortes expedition:were Indian allies and European disease19
1616460415**With the significant international exchange that occurred after 1492, the three important crops transplanted to the New World were:coffee, rice, and sugar20
1616460416**As a result of explorations of North America in the 1530s and 1540s, Spain:reversed its policy of converting natives to Christianity21
1616460417**When France first became interested in establishing colonies in the New World:it concentrated on the Caribbean islands because of the valuable natural resources there22
1616460418**The early French efforts in America were based on commerce, especially the trade inanimal furs23
1616460419**An important element in encouraging the English interest in the New World was:economic dislocations throughout England24
1616460420**In the years from 1492 to 1590:the Spanish, French, and English employed different approaches to establishing colonies in America25

Out of Many: A History of the American People Chapter 1 Flashcards

Hey, guys, here is some flashcards for class. So, yay! Order goes as followed first vocabulary, then quick review, then ap prep test where * marks the start of a new section.

Terms : Hide Images
1614645313Cahokiaone of the largest urban centers created by Mississippian peoples, containing 30,000 residents in 12500
1614645314transoceanic migrationsa population migration across oceans1
1614645315Beringiaa subcontinent bridging Asia and North America, named after the Bering Straits2
1614645316AthapascanA people that began to settle the forests in the northwestern area of North America around 5000 B.C.E.3
1614645317Clovis traditiona powerful new and sophisticated style of tool making, unlike anything found in the Old World4
1614645318Pleistocene Overkillintensified hunting efforts brought on in response to lowered reproduction and survival rates of large animals5
1614645319Archaic periodthe period roughly 10,000 to 2,500 years ago marked by the retreat of glaciers6
1614645320clansgroups of allied families7
1614645321Mesoamericathe region stretching from central Mexico to Central America8
1614645322Aztecsa warrior people who dominated the Valley of Mexico from 1100 to 15219
1614645323Rancheriasdispersed settlements of Indian farmers in the Southwest10
1614645324Kachinasimpersonations of the ancestral spirits by Southwest Indians11
1614645325*The Earliest Americans-no single physical type characterized the peoples of the Americas -migration from Asia began about 30,000 years ago -stone age hunters brought tools and animals with them on their journey12
1614645326*The Clovis Tradition-emerged around 10,000 B.C.E. -a new and powerful style of tool making -Clovis artifacts found throughout North and Central America13
1614645327*Forest Living-Eastern North American (was) a vast forest -Indian communities took advantage of rich forest resources -Indians developed settled forest communities14
1614645328*Mesoamerica-Mesoamerica was the birthplace of agriculture in North America -Olmecs: first literate urban culture in region -Mayan civilization flourished between about 300 B.C.E. and 900 C.E.15
1614645329*The South-mild, moist climate -Indian peoples of the South farmed, fished, and hunted -peoples of the South shared agricultural festivals16
1614645330*The Northwest-varied geography of plains, mountains, rivers, lakes, and valleys -the Iroquois have lived in the region for 4,500 years -population growth and intensification of farming led to the development of chiefdoms17
1614645331**When Europeans arrived in North America at the beginning of the sixteenth century:Indians had developed a variety of disparate cultures and languages18
1614645332**Studies that compare DNA have revealed a close genetic relationship between American Indians and the people ofAsia19
1614645333**Recent archaeological evidence has led some scholars to conclude that early migration in North America:occurred by water as people used boats to travel along the western coastline of the continent20
1614645334**Scholarly research leads to the conclusion that Clovis technology:dramatically improved agricultural production and led to significant population growth21
1614645335**A major event that occurred in North America during the Archaic period was:the end of the Ice Age and the retreat of the glaciers22
1614645336**The "miracle crops" that first emerged in North America were:maize and potatoes23
1614645337**When using the term "resisted revolution," historians are referring to:the refusal of some Indian groups to shift to an agricultural society24
1614645338**An extraordinary example of complex and sophisticated mound-building society was:um idk I think Hopewell25

Pages

Subscribe to CourseNotes RSS

Need Help?

We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.

If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.

Need Notes?

While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!