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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. During the Great Society - the marble cake approach of intergovernmental relations.
Treaty
Logrolling
Issue network
Creative federalism
2. A provision in a deed to real property prohibiting its sale to a person of a particular race or religion. Judicial enforcement of such deeds is unconstitutional.
Hold
Party identification
Restrictive covenant
Express powers
3. Divisions within society that cut across demographic categories to produce groups that are more heterogeneous or different.
Cross-cutting cleavages
National debt
Deregulation
Race
4. A convention held in September 1786 to consider problems of trade and navigation - attended by five states and important because it issued the call to Congress and the states for what became the Constitutional Convention.
Voter registration
Annapolis Convention
Impoundment
Leadership PAC
5. A formal agreement between a U.S. president and the leaders of other nations that acquires approval by both houses of Congress.
Appellate jurisdiction
National supremacy
Closed shop
Congressional-executive agreement
6. 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
American dream
Constitutional democracy
Commerce clause
7. A meeting of local party members to choose party officials or candidates for public office and to decide the platform.
Competitive federalism
Court of appeals
Caucus
Revolving door
8. 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.
Impoundment
Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
Regulatory taking
Right of expatriation
9. Election in which voters choose party nominees.
Capitalism
Procedural due process
Interested money
Direct primary
10. A landmark case in United States law and the basis for the exercise of judicial review in the United States - under Article Three of the United States Constitution. The case resulted from a petition to the Supreme Court by William Marbury - who had b
Primary election
Eminent domain
Marbury v. Madison
Unfunded mandates
11. The list of potential cases that reach the Supreme Court.
Plurality
Redistricting
Docket
Writ of mandamus
12. The legislative leader selected by the minority party as spokesperson for the opposition.
Cycle of increasing effectiveness
Primary election
Turnout
Minority leader
13. A court with appellate jurisdiction that hears appeals from the decisions of lower courts.
Court of appeals
Public defender system
Redistributive policy
Senatorial courtesy
14. A judicial system in which the court of law is a neutral arena where two parties argue their differences.
Proportional representation
Filibuster
News media
Adversary system
15. Interpretation of the First Amendment that would permit legislatures to forbid speech encouraging people to engage in illegal action.
Standing committee
Antitrust legislation
Public policy
Bad tendency test
16. The desire to avoid international entanglement altogether.
Impeachment
Isolationism
White primary
Normal trade relations
17. Alternative means of health care in which individuals make tax-deductible contributions to a special account that can be used to pay medical expenses.
Dealignment
National Intelligence Director
Filibuster
Medical savings account
18. Mutual aid and vote trading among legislators.
Right of expatriation
Cooperative federalism
Logrolling
Crossover sanctions
19. Assigning police to neighborhoods where they walk the beat and work with churches and other community groups to reduce crime and improve relations with minorities.
Social Security
Community policing
Filibuster
Impoundment
20. A grouping of human beings with distinctive characteristics determined by genetic inheritance.
Parliamentary system
Race
Eminent domain
Federal mandate
21. A government that enforces recognized limits on those who govern and allows the voice of the people to be heard through free - fair - and relatively frequent elections.
Public assistance
Plurality
Constitutional democracy
Regressive tax
22. Compromise agreement by states at the Constitutional Convention for a bicameral legislature with a lower house in which representation would be based on population and an upper house in which each state would have two senators.
Connecticut Compromise
Executive orders
Creative federalism
Suffrage
23. Requirement that evidence unconstitutionally or illegally obtained be excluded from a criminal trial.
Community policing
Exclusionary rule
Selective exposure
Redistributive policy
24. The joint listing of the presidential and vice presidential candidates on the same ballot as required by the Twelfth Amendment.
Leadership PAC
Presidential ticket
Competitive federalism
Poll tax
25. Candidate or party with the most votes cast in an election - not necessarily more than half.
Override
Bicameralism
Office of Personnel Management (OPM)
Plurality
26. Presidential refusal to allow an agency to spend funds that Congress authorized and appropriated.
Name recognition
Impoundment
Literacy test
Civil disobedience
27. The candidate or party that wins more than half the votes cast in an election.
Rule-making process
Soft money
Majority
Independent regulatory commission
28. Literacy requirements some states imposed as a condition of voting - generally used to disqualify black voters in the South; now illegal.
Executive order
Restrictive covenant
Party identification
Literacy test
29. A commission created by the 1974 amendments to the Federal Election Campaign Act to administer election reform laws. It consists of six commissioners appointed by president and confirmed by the Senate. Its duties include overseeing disclosure of camp
Public opinion
Entitlements
Prospective issue voting
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
30. The powers of the national government in foreign affairs that the Supreme Court has declared do not depend on constitutional grants but rather grow out of the very existence of the national government.
De jure segregation
Impeachment
Search warrant
Inherent powers
31. Donations made to political candidates - party committees - or groups which - by law - are limited and must be declared.
Liberalism
Hard money
Issue network
Indictment
32. Presidential power to strike - or remove - specific items from a spending bill without vetoing the entire package; declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
Line item veto
Monopoly
Representative democracy
Speaker
33. Retroactive criminal law that works to the disadvantage of a person.
Public defender system
Earmarks
Independent expenditure
Ex post facto law
34. The right of a federal law or a regulation to preclude enforcement of a state or local law or regulation.
Pluralism
Initiative
Preemption
Winner-take-all system
35. Programs such as Medicaid and welfare under which applicants must meet eligibility requirements based on need.
Checks and balances
Interstate compact
Majority leader
Means-tested entitlements
36. A philosophy that encourages individual nations tacked together to solve international problems.
Multilateralism
Independent expenditures
Reapportionment
Community policing
37. Government in which the people elect those who govern and pass laws; also called a republic.
Majority rule
Central clearance
Representative democracy
Government corporation
38. Primary election in which only persons registered in the party holding the primary may vote.
Logrolling
Executive order
Direct democracy
Closed primary
39. Governance according to the expressed preferences of the majority.
Majority rule
Dealignment
Grand jury
Iron triangle
40. Formal accusation by the lower house of legislature against a public official - the first step in removal from office.
Democracy
Public choice
Closed primary
Impeachment
41. A jury of 6 to 12 persons that determines guilt or innocence in a civil or criminal action.
Race
527 organizations
Petit jury
Federal mandate
42. Interpretation of the First Amendment that holds that freedom of expression is so essential to democracy that governments should not punish persons for what they say - only for what they do.
Rally point
Redistricting
Preferred position doctrine
Delegate
43. 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.
Reapportionment
Proportional representation
Indexing
Majority leader
44. The portion of the Federal budget that is spent on programs - such as Social Security - that the president and Congress are unwilling to cut.
Keynesian economics
Uncontrollable spending
Line item veto
National supremacy
45. A national meeting of delegates elected in primaries - caucuses - or state conventions who assemble once every four years to nominate candidates for president and vice president - ratify the party platform - elect officers - and adopt rules.
National party convention
Soft money
Judicial review
Winner-take-all system
46. The authority of a court to hear a case 'in the first instance.'
Plea bargain
Original jurisdiction
Community policing
Green party
47. An official who is expected to vote independently based on his or her judgment of the circumstances; one interpretation of the role of the legislator.
Executive orders
Merit system
Trust
Trustee
48. A collection of people who share a common interest or attitude and seek to influence government for specific ends. Interest groups usually work within the framework of government and try to achieve their goals through tactics such as lobbying.
Divided government
Idealism
Appellate jurisdiction
Interest group
49. How groups form and organize to pursue their goals or objectives - including how to get individuals and groups to participate and to cooperate. The term has many applications in the various social sciences such as political science - sociology - and
Restrictive covenant
Collective action
Political action committee (PAC)
Block grants
50. A tactic in which PACs collect contributions from like-minded individuals (each limited to $2000) and present them to a candidate or political party as a 'bundle -' thus increasing the PAC's influence.
Inherent powers
Bundling
Medical savings account
Extradition