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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. A procedural rule in the House of Representatives that permits floor amendments within the overall time allocated to the bill.
Manifest opinion
Enumerated powers
Petit jury
Open rule
2. A law that governs relationships between individuals and defines their legal rights.
Civil law
Candidate appeal
Gerrymandering
Stare decisis
3. A monopoly that controls goods and services - often in combinations that reduce competition.
Trust
Issue advocacy
Search warrant
Stare decisis
4. Federal laws (starting with the Sherman Act of 1890) that tried to prevent a monopoly from dominating an industry and restraining trade.
Antitrust legislation
Party identification
Federal Reserve System
Democratic consensus
5. Directive issued by a president or governor that has the force of law.
Concurrent powers
Value-added tax (VAT)
Executive order
Independent regulatory commission
6. Segregation resulting from economic or social conditions or personal choice.
Devolution revolution
Selective incorporation
Gerrymandering
De facto segregation
7. A rise in the general price level (and decrease in dollar value) owing to an increase in the volume of money and credit in relation to available goods.
Inflation
Concurrent powers
Permissive federalism
Override
8. The proportion of the voting age public that votes - sometimes defined as the number of registered voters that vote.
Cross-cutting cleavages
Turnout
Isolationism
Economic sanctions
9. Divisions within society that cut across demographic categories to produce groups that are more heterogeneous or different.
New Jersey Plan
Cross-cutting cleavages
Discharge petition
Regressive tax
10. A career government employee.
Bureaucrat
Checks and balances
Quid pro quo
Executive order
11. The means by which individuals can express preferences regarding the development of public policy.
Proportional representation
Linkage institutions
Pluralism
Political socialization
12. Interest groups organized under section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code may advertise for or against candidates. If their source of funding is corporations or unions - they have some restrictions on broadcast advertising. 527 organizations were impo
Preferred position doctrine
Political predisposition
527 organizations
Regulations
13. A government agency or commission with regulatory power whose independence is protected by Congress.
Independent regulatory commission
Merit system
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Docket
14. The political arm of an interest group that is legally entitled to raise funds on a voluntary basis from members - stockholders - or employees to contribute funds to candidates or political parties.
Iron triangle
Photo ops
Green party
Political action committee (PAC)
15. In this type of sample - every individual has unknown and random chance of being selected.
Plea bargain
Random sample
Due process clause
Right of expatriation
16. Election in which voters choose party nominees.
Statism
Direct primary
Delegate
Deregulation
17. A philosophy that encourages individual nations tacked together to solve international problems.
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
Tariff
Proportional representation
Multilateralism
18. During the Great Society - the marble cake approach of intergovernmental relations.
Creative federalism
Rally point
Docket
Internationalism
19. Trade status granted as part of an international trade policy that gives a nation the same favorable trade concessions and tariffs that the best trading partners receive.
Civil disobedience
Popular sovereignty
Normal trade relations
Internationalism
20. A policy adopted by the Bush administration in 2001 that asserts America's right to attack any nation that has weapons of mass destruction that might be used against U.S. interests at home or abroad.
Bush Doctrine
National debt
Decentralists
Australian ballot
21. Money government provides to parents to pay their children's tuition in a public or private school of their choice.
Iron triangle
Dissenting opinion
Project grants
Vouchers
22. A veto exercised by the president after Congress has adjourned; if the president takes no action for 10 days - the bill does not become law and does not return to Congress for possible override.
Writ of mandamus
Offshoring
Women's suffrage
Pocket veto
23. A technique of Congress to establish federal regulations. Direct orders must be complied with under threat of criminal or civil sanction. An example is the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972 - barring job discrimination by state and local gover
Direct orders
Distributive policy
Caucus
Idealism
24. A tax on increased value of the product at each stage of production and distribution rather than just at the point of sale.
Offshoring
Mandate
Value-added tax (VAT)
Bundling
25. A policy-making alliance that involves a very strong ties among a congressional committee - an interest group - and a Federal Department or agency.
Iron triangle
527 organizations
Federal mandate
Capitalism
26. The president's annual statement to Congress and the nation.
Selected perception
Right of expatriation
State of the Union Address
Unilateralism
27. The right to renounce one's citizenship.
Constituents
Caucus
Issue advocacy
Right of expatriation
28. Efforts by government to alter the free operation of the market to achieve social goals such as protecting workers and the environment.
Antitrust legislation
Regulations
Regulation
Due process clause
29. A congressional district created to include a majority of minority voters; ruled constitutional so long as race is not the main factor in redistricting.
Majority-minority district
Chief of staff
Political party
Treaty
30. The reliance on economic and military strength to solve international problems.
Closed primary
Majority-minority district
Chief of staff
Hard power
31. Views the Constitution as giving a limited list of powers—primarily foreign policy and national defense—to the national government - leaving the rest to the sovereign states. Each level of government is dominant within its own sphere. The Supreme Cou
Theocracy
Dual federalism (layer cake federalism)
Constitutionalism
Judicial restraint
32. A dispute growing out of an actual case or controversy and that is capable of settlement by legal methods.
Justiciable dispute
Soft money
Suffrage
Total and Partial Preemption
33. Through different grant programs - slices up the marble cake into many different pieces - making it even more difficult to differentiate the functions of the levels of government.
Bad tendency test
Senatorial courtesy
Socialism
Fiscal federalism
34. Constitutional requirement that governments act reasonably and that the substance of the laws themselves be fair and reasonable; limits what the government may do.
Monopoly
Substantive due process
Winner-take-all system
Categorical-formula grants
35. A rising public approval of the president that follows a crisis as Americans 'rally 'round the flag' and the chief executive.
Executive privilege
Labor injunction
Rally point
Honeymoon
36. Conceives of federalism as a marble cake in which all levels of government are involved in a variety of issues and programs - rather than a layer cake - or dual federalism - with fixed divisions between layers or levels of government.
Party registration
Marble cake federalism
Civil law
Proportional representation
37. A court with appellate jurisdiction that hears appeals from the decisions of lower courts.
Court of appeals
Antitrust legislation
Issue network
Justiciable dispute
38. A belief that government can and should achieve justice and equality of opportunity.
Liberalism
Docket
Ethnicity
Jim Crow laws
39. 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.
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Gross domestic product (GDP)
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
Eminent domain
40. Promoting a particular position or an issue paid for by interest groups or individuals but not candidates. Much issue advocacy is often electioneering for or against a candidate - and until 2004 had not been subject to any regulation.
Issue advocacy
Crossover voting
Preemption
Speaker
41. Petition that - if signed by majority of the House of Representatives' members - will pry a bill from committee and bring it to the floor for consideration.
'Necessary and proper' clause
Discharge petition
Independent expenditures
Keynesian economics
42. A meeting of party delegates to vote on matters of policy and in some cases to select party candidates for public office.
Party convention
Indictment
Constitutional democracy
Unfunded mandates
43. Clause in the Constitution (Article 4 - Section 1) requiring each state to recognize the civil judgments rendered by the courts of the other states and to accept their public records and acts as valid.
Full faith and credit clause
Natural law
Capitalism
Trust
44. Statement required by Federal law from all agencies for any project using Federal funds to assess the potential affect of the new construction or development on the environment.
Unfunded mandates
Party caucus
Turnout
Environmental impact statement
45. State laws formerly pervasive throughout the South requiring public facilities and accommodations to be segregated by race; ruled unconstitutional.
Idealism
Photo ops
Community policing
Jim Crow laws
46. An ideology that cherishes individual liberty and insists on minimal government - promoting a free market economy - a noninterventionist foreign policy - and an absence of regulation in moral - economic - and social life.
Monopoly
Caucus
Libertarianism
Monopoly
47. Rebellion led by Daniel Shays of farmers in western Massachusetts in 1786-1787 - protesting mortgage foreclosures. It highlighted the need for a strong national government just as the call for the Constitutional Convention went out.
48. The inclination to focus on national issues - rather than local issues - in an election campaign. The impact of the national tide can be reduced by the nature of the candidates on the ballot who might have differentiated themselves from their party o
Party identification
National tide
Realigning election
Block grants
49. A formal written statement from a grand jury charging an individual with an offense; also called a true bill.
Caucus
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
Indictment
Fiscal policy
50. Election system in which the candidate with the most votes wins.
De facto segregation
Incumbent
Prior restraint
Winner-take-all system