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Test your basic knowledge |
AP Government
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
civics
,
ap
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Usually the largest organization in government with the largest mission; also the highest rank in Federal hierarchy.
Photo ops
Department
Incumbent
Libertarian party
2. Words that by their very nature inflict injury on those to whom they are addressed or insight them to acts of violence.
Defendant
Impoundment
Fighting words
State of the Union Address
3. The boost that candidates may get in an election because of the popularity of candidates above them on the ballot - especially the president.
Coattail effect
Independent expenditures
Natural rights
Court of appeals
4. The drawing of election districts so as to ensure that members of a certain race are a minority in the district; ruled unconstitutional in Gomillion v. Lightfoot (1960).
Racial gerrymandering
Isolationism
Open rule
Closed rule
5. An agency of Congress that analyzes presidential budget recommendations and estimates the cost of proposed legislation.
Popular sovereignty
Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
Procedural due process
Minority leader
6. The legislative leader selected by the majority party who helps plan party strategy - confers with other party leaders - and tries to keep members of the party in line.
Oversight
Interstate compact
Impeachment
Majority leader
7. A meeting of local party members to choose party officials or candidates for public office and to decide the platform.
Constitutional democracy
Faction
Preemption
Caucus
8. A type of policy that takes benefits (usually through taxes) from one group of Americans and gives them to another (usually through spending).
Redistributive policy
Primary election
Hard power
President pro tempore
9. A law that governs relationships between individuals and defines their legal rights.
Civil law
Racial profiling
Interested money
Federalists
10. The informal list of issues that Congress and the president consider most important for action.
Policy agenda
Selective exposure
Random sample
Presidential election
11. Formal orders issued by the president to direct action by the Federal bureaucracy.
Civil law
Executive orders
Block grants
Monetarism
12. The rights of all people to dignity and worth; also called human rights.
Party caucus
Natural rights
Annapolis Convention
Standing committee
13. Period at the beginning of the new president's term during which the president enjoys generally positive relations with the press and Congress - usually lasting about six months.
Honeymoon
Socialism
Reapportionment
Jim Crow laws
14. The dispensing of government jobs to persons who belong to the winning political party.
Horse race
Hard power
Progressive tax
Patronage
15. Constitutional arrangement in which sovereign nations or states - by compact - create a central government but carefully limit its power and do not give it direct authority over individuals.
Civil disobedience
Confederation
Sales tax
Cycle of decreasing influence
16. The set of arrangements - including checks and balances - federalism - separation of powers - rule of law - due process - and a bill of rights - that requires our leaders to listen - think - bargain - and explain before they act or make laws. We then
Constitutionalism
Majority rule
White primary
Gross domestic product (GDP)
17. A procedural rule in the House of Representatives that prohibits any amendments to bills or provides that only members of the committee reporting the bill may offer amendments.
Independent expenditure
Closed rule
Popular consent
Grand jury
18. Engaging in activities aimed at influencing public officials - especially legislators - and the policies they enact.
Lobbying
Soft power
Laissez-faire economics
Party caucus
19. Primary election in which only persons registered in the party holding the primary may vote.
Closed primary
Medicare
National party convention
Direct orders
20. Power of a government to take private property for public use; the U.S. Constitution gives national and state governments this power and requires them to provide just compensation for property so taken.
Direct democracy
World Trade Organization (WTO)
Nongovernmental organization (NGO)
Eminent domain
21. Legal process whereby an alleged criminal offender is surrendered by the officials of one states to officials of the state in which the crime is alleged to have been committed.
Value-added tax (VAT)
Social insurance
Realism
Extradition
22. The head of the White House staff.
Right of expatriation
Override
Racial profiling
Chief of staff
23. The clause in the Constitution (Article 1 - Section 8 - Clause 1) that gives Congress the power to regulate all business activities that cross state lines or affect more than one state or other nations.
Commerce clause
Obscenity
Theory of deterrence
Closed primary
24. Government in which citizens vote on laws and select officials directly.
Separation of powers
Proportional representation
Senatorial courtesy
Direct democracy
25. The first governing document of the confederated states drafted in 1777 - ratified in 1781 - and replaced by the present Constitution in 1789.
Suffrage
Cycle of increasing effectiveness
Justiciable dispute
Articles of Confederation
26. Party leader who is the liaison between the leadership and the rank-and-file in the legislature.
Government corporation
Take care clause
Whip
Electoral college
27. Unlimited amounts of money that political parties previously could raise for party-building purposes. Now largely illegal except for limited contributions to state and local parties for voter registration and get-out-the-vote efforts.
Central clearance
Procedural due process
Soft money
Mass media
28. The process by which provisions of the bill of rights are brought within the scope of the Fourteenth Amendment and so applied to state and local governments.
Inherent powers
Hard power
Selective incorporation
Attentive public
29. Presidential custom of submitting the names of perspective appointees for approval to senators from the states in which the appointees are to work.
Conference committee
Senatorial courtesy
Proportional representation
Department
30. A consistent pattern of beliefs about political values and the role of government.
Political ideology
Nonpartisan election
Court of appeals
Three-fifths compromise
31. Supporters of ratification of the Constitution and of a strong central government.
Federalists
New Jersey Plan
Bureaucracy
Executive privilege
32. Segregation imposed by law.
Cycle of decreasing influence
De jure segregation
Administrative discretion
Bicameralism
33. The process by which individuals perceive what they want to in media messages.
Libertarianism
Selected perception
Direct primary
Naturalization
34. Domination of an industry by a single company that fixes prices and discourages competition; also - the company that dominates the industry by these means.
527 organizations
Entitlement programs
Monopoly
Judicial activism
35. A requirement the federal government imposes as a condition for receiving federal funds.
Soft money
Federal mandate
Treaty
Inherent powers
36. Government regulation of property so extensive that government is deemed to have taken the property by the power of eminent domain - for which it must compensate the property owners.
Poll tax
Docket
Regulatory taking
Divided government
37. Those citizens who follow public affairs carefully.
Caucus
Impeachment
De jure segregation
Attentive public
38. A minor party that believes in extremely limited government. Libertarians call for a free market system - expanded individual liberties such as drug legalization - and a foreign policy of nonintervention - free trade - and open immigration.
Political socialization
Political culture
Libertarian party
Mandate
39. An economic and governmental system based on public ownership of the means of production and exchange.
Ethnocentrism
Soft money
Socialism
General election
40. The residents of a congressional district or state.
Petit jury
The Federalist
Constituents
Reapportionment
41. Biological - chemical - or nuclear weapons that can cause a massive number of deaths in a single use.
Gross domestic product (GDP)
Exclusionary rule
Criminal law
Weapons of mass destruction
42. The widespread belief that the United States is a land of opportunity and that individual initiative and hard work can bring economic success.
Logrolling
Pocket veto
Take care clause
American dream
43. Elections held in years when the president is on the ballot.
Standing committee
Bicameralism
Green party
Presidential election
44. The study of the characteristics of populations.
Closed primary
Demographics
Women's suffrage
Collective action
45. A permanent committee established in a legislature - usually focusing on a policy area.
Nonpartisan election
Standing committee
Trust
Permissive federalism
46. Government in which the people elect those who govern and pass laws; also called a republic.
Jim Crow laws
Impeachment
Representative democracy
Literacy test
47. A provision attached to a bill
Capitalism
Dual federalism (layer cake federalism)
Presidential election
Rider
48. A formal - public agreement between the United States and one or more nations that must be approved by two thirds of the Senate.
Rider
Grand jury
Treaty
Bill of attainder
49. Money raised in unlimited amounts by political parties for party-building purposes. Now largely illegal except for limited contributions to state or local parties for voter registration and get-out-the-vote efforts.
Regressive tax
Horse race
Soft money
Theory of deterrence
50. Economic theory based on the principles of John Maynard Keynes stating that government spending should increase during business slumps and be curbed during booms.
Demographics
Keynesian economics
Enumerated powers
Public policy