SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
SAT Subject Test: U.S. History Vocab
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
sat
,
history
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. The practice of paying for goods at regular intervals - usually with interest added to the balance - associated with consumption in the 1920s.
Installment Plans
Pro-Choice
Guerrilla War
New Left
2. The Eisenhower-era theory that one communist country would infiltrate or influence its neighbors - supporting insurrection there and causing them to become communist too. They would fall like a series of dominoes standing close together. Kennedy - Jo
Domino Theory
Black Power
Settlement House Movement
Consumer Society
3. A type of adjustable-rate mortgage - often requiring no down payment - offered to customers with risky credit ratings. The lending institution makes money by steadily increasing interest payments.
Family Values
Subprime Mortgage
Escalation
War on Poverty
4. The policy of supplying government support for corporations when they are in severe financial trouble. The Chrysler Corporation - for example - got a $1.5 billion bailout in 1980 - and the savings and loan banks received at least $159 billion during
Indentured Servitude
Backlash
Progressive Movement
Bailouts
5. The political and social conviction that only white Protestant Americans deserved civil rights and employment. Nativists tried to prevent the Irish and the new immigrants of the 1880's-1920's from becoming citizens or entering the country. The Know-N
Mass Production
Free Soil Position
Unicameral Legislature
Nativism
6. Government policy of noninterference in business practices and in individuals economic affairs; literally translated as "to let do."
Laissez-Faire
Separation of Powers
Mortgage-Backed Securities
Yellow-dog Contract
7. A prosecutor chosen by a panel of three judges (appointed by the attorney general) to investigate wrongdoing in the executive branch. Established after the Watergate Scandal - the role was designed to prevent conflict of interest within the executive
Civil Rights Movement
Weapons of Mass Destruction
Puppet Regimes
Independent Counsel
8. The policy practiced by the European nations prior to WWII wherein they made concessions to aggressive nations-particularly - Hitler's Germany-in hopes of satisfying the demands of that nation and ending further aggression.
Tariff
Appeasement
Interstate Commerce
Sit-Down Strike
9. A tax on imports (goods coming into a country). Tariffs were advocated by Alexander Hamilton in 1792 and favored by the supporters of the American System to pay for internal improvements and protect US industry. Tariffs were often a main issue in Jac
Second Wave of Feminism
Tariff
Mass Production
Secession
10. The 19th and early 20th century movement to limit or outlaw the drinking of alcoholic beverages. The movement achieved its ultimate success with the passage of the 18th Amendment-or Prohibition- which went into effect in 1920.
Scalawags
Democracy
Baby Boom
Temperance Movement
11. The formal or official approval for a constitution or amendment.
Barbed Wire
Mortgage-Backed Securities
Ratification
Self-Governing Colony
12. The term denoting the ongoing military battle of the US and its allies against terrorism - first used by George W. Bush when addressing a joint session of Congress following the terrorist attacks on September 11 - 2001.
War on Terror
Theocracy
Homesteaders
Rugged Individualism
13. A policy of empire building in which a nation conquers other nations or territories with the goal of increasing its power and expanding the area it controls. This was a cause of WWI.
Imperialism
Mestizos
Impeachment
Teenagers
14. Motion pictures with sound. The Jazz Singer (1927) was the first movie to use sound in a significant way.
Direct Primary
Interstate Commerce
Talkies
Subprime Mortgage
15. A company that developed in the early 1600s in England wherein a group of investors pooled their money to finance exploration of the new World. The investor would receive a portion of the profits resulting from the exploration of the New World based
Dollar Diplomacy
Joint Stock Company
Boston Tea Party
Speakeasies
16. The reaction of some whites to the Civil Rights Movement and the urban riots of the 1960s. The formerly solidly Democratic South started voting Republican following the gains of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s - and many whites sent their kids
Teenagers
Black Power
Sit-Down Strike
Backlash
17. An economic system in which the production and distribution of goods is determined by individual consumer preference. It is characterized by the free-enterprise system - competition - profit motive - and pricing based on the laws of supply and demand
Capitalism
Yellow Journalism
Medicare
Independent Counsel
18. The practice of buying stock on credit. People pay a small percentage of the price of the stock - hoping that it will go up in value and that they can use money from the sale to pay the balance they owe. This practice contributed to the stock market
Capitalism
Direct Democracy
Confederation
Margin Buying
19. A method of mass production whereby the products are moved from worker to worker - with each person performing a small - repetitive task on the product and sending it to the next for a different task until the finished item is assembled. In the 18th
Industrial Unionism
Assembly Line
Division of Powers
Blacklist
20. A type of coal - noted for being hard and clean burning.
Bush Doctrine
Weapons of Mass Destruction
Summit Meeting
Anthracite Coal
21. The system built into the US Constitution in which the three branches of government (legislative - executive - and judicial) have separate and equal powers that are limited and dependent upon each other. It is also called checks and balances.
Separation of Powers
Scab
Bimetallists
Guerrilla War
22. Critical term for the owners of the big business of the Gilded Age who accumulated great wealth and power.
Isolationism
Robber Baron
Talkies
Direct Primary
23. The idea that machinery eliminates the need for human employment-that the development of new machine-based methods of work can lead to workers' losing their jobs.
Encomienda
Technological Unemployment
Direct Democracy
Industrial Unionism
24. A type of colony that was settled by a group of investors and in which the governor of the colony was chosen by the proprietors.
Robber Baron
Imperialism
Margin Buying
Proprietary Colony
25. The movement of mostly college-educated women to provide shelter - cultural activities - and services to the poor. The height of the movement occurred in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Lynching
Settlement House Movement
Unlawful Combatants
Independent Counsel
26. A system of government in which the religious leaders rule. A church-state - where the church is the government - is an example.
Theocracy
Hawks
Telegraph
Two-Party System
27. A global pact initiated in 1997 and put into force in 2005 designed to reduce greenhouse emissions to levels that would avoid climate change. The United States is not one of the 187 nations who have ratified the pact.
Kyoto Protocol
New Frontier
New Left
Mortgage-Backed Securities
28. Illegal bars and saloons that operated during Prohibition.
Speakeasies
Anthracite Coal
Muckrackers
Consumer Society
29. A form of educational protest at universities. The practice began in 1965 at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor - when professors and students analyzed US foreign policy and debated with each other and-only in the earlier days of the war-with go
Loose Constructionist
Reserved Powers Clause
Teach-Ins
Family Values
30. Perfected by Samuel F. B. Morse in 1844 - the telegraph allowed for communications over long distances by tapping out coded messages to be carried over wires.
Telegraph
Scab
Unicameral Legislature
Joint Stock Company
31. A high tax placed on imports. Its purpose is to make domestic goods cheaper than foreign goods - thus "protecting" domestic industry.
Teach-Ins
Realist Movement
Second Reconstruction
Protective Tariff
32. The Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s was called the "Second Reconstruction" because the first Reconstruction in the 1860s and 1870s had not brought equality for blacks.
Second Reconstruction
Blue Laws
Mestizos
Two-Party System
33. A legislature composed of only one house or chamber.
Domino Theory
Manifest Destiny
Domino Theory
Unicameral Legislature
34. The political advocacy of black-owned businesses and independent black political action. Stokely Carmichael first used the term in a position paper for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in 1965.
Second Reconstruction
Black Power
Industrial Unionism
Guerrilla War
35. An agricultural system in which farm workers supply their own tools - rent land - and have more control over their work than agrarian wage workers.
Yellow-dog Contract
Robber Baron
Tenant Farming
Family Values
36. The principal that the Supreme Court has the power to review laws passed by Congress and actions taken by the president to determine whether or not they are consistent with the Constitution. The Supreme Court can declare a law or presidential action
Judicial Review
Baby Boom
Protective Tariff
Vertical Integration
37. The first wave was in the 1830s through the early 20th century when the radicals Elizabeth Cady Stanton - Susan B. Anthony - and Lucretia Mott advocated equality - employment - education - and suffrage. The second wave - which advocated these same id
Teach-Ins
Second Wave of Feminism
Interchangeable Parts
Second Reconstruction
38. A land policy developed in the 1600s in Virginia and Maryland designed to encourage settlement in the New World. It promised 50 acres to any person who paid his own passage to the New World. It also promised an additional 50 acres to any person who p
Division of Powers
Boston Tea Party
Headright System
Militarism
39. A term coined in the 1950s to describe illegal or undesirable behavior by teenagers.
Juvenile Delinquency
Urban Riots
Secession
Loose Constructionist
40. Trade that takes place within the boundaries of a state. Under the US Constitution - the power to regulate intrastate commerce is delegated to the states.
Cabinet
Culture Wars
Intrastate Commerce
Joint Stock Company
41. The name used by the administration of President Lyndon B. Johnson to describe its domestic programs.
Great Society
Unlawful Combatants
Impressment
White Flight
42. The exodus of white - middle-class families from cities to suburbia following WWII due to the migration of African Americans to urban centers.
Transcontinental Railway
Proprietary Colony
Yellow-dog Contract
White Flight
43. A machine that separates seeds from the cotton. The short-staple cotton that grew inland in the South's Black Belt could be cleaned profitably only with the cotton gin. The invention of the cotton gin allowed cotton cultivation to spread - enabling s
Grandfather Clauses
Cotton Gin
Direct Primary
Free Soil Position
44. An economic system in which the state controls the production and distribution of certain products deemed necessary for the good of the people
Nonaggression Treaty
Free Blacks
Scab
Socialism
45. Persons who do not represent a state or nation who participate in military conflict and do not adhere to accepted rules of war. According to the Bush administration - unlawful combatants captured on the battlefield and detained off of US soil are not
Unlawful Combatants
Division of Powers
Supply-Side Economics
Second Wave of Feminism
46. Machine-made or standardized parts that could be put together to make a product. Eli Whitney demonstrated to President John Adams in 1801 how a box of guns could be disassembled and reassembled randomly. Each part must be precision-made so that it wi
Assembly Line
Scab
Interchangeable Parts
Doves
47. The economic state in which prices are rising (inflation) and unemployment is high - producing stagnation of growth.
Poll Tax
Mortgage-Backed Securities
Cold War
Stagflation
48. Popular music genre - with roots in African American rhythm and blues and "doo-wop." It developed in the 1950s and was popularized by Elvis Presley.
Self-Governing Colony
Backlash
Rock and Roll
Unicameral Legislature
49. This clause - found in the last paragraph of Article I Section 8 of the US Constitution - allows Congress to make laws not specifically delegated to it by the Constitution but that may be "necessary and proper" to carry out its delegated powers. (Als
Independent Counsel
Bootleggers
Elastic Clause
Culture Wars
50. The conflict between the Soviet Union and the United States from the end of WWII until the collapse of the Soviet Union (1991). It was characterized by harsh rhetoric - technological rivalry - an arms buildup - and proxy wars in developing countries.
Direct Democracy
Escalation
Juvenile Delinquency
Cold War