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. 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.
Veto
Intrastate Commerce
Nonaggression Treaty
Laissez-Faire
2. The practice of granting the firstborn son the right to all the inheritance of the parent's estate - rather than subdividing it and giving portions to all offspring.
Primogeniture
Suburbia
Culture Wars
Robber Baron
3. A court order stopping a specific act - often used against unions to end a strike.
Injunction
Abolitionism
Temperance Movement
Protective Tariff
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
Mortgage-Backed Securities
Bimetallists
Bailouts
New Frontier
5. President Roosevelt's (FDR) attempt in 1936 to push a judicial reform bill through Congress that would allow him to appoint six new Supreme Court justices sympathetic to his New Deal.
Free Silverites
Cotton Gin
Court Packing Scheme
New Frontier
6. Bundles of subprime mortgages that are traded like stocks.
Second Wave of Feminism
Domino Theory
Independent Counsel
Mortgage-Backed Securities
7. A political system dominated by two parties. Voters reluctance to support third parties reinforces the two-party system. The first two-party system - dating back to the 1970s - included the Federalist and Republican Parties. The current two-party sys
Two-Party System
Lynching
Cold War
Ecology
8. Journalists of the Progressive era who exposed urban poverty - unsafe working conditions - political corruption - and other social ills.
Virtual Representation
Muckrackers
Horizontal Integration
Loyalty Oaths
9. Philosophical movement - with deep roots in the United States - which holds that truth emerges from experimentation and experience rather than from abstract theory. it is associated with William James and John Dewey.
Scalawags
Secession
Free Soil Position
Pragmatism
10. The political position that favors abortion on demand.
Installment Plans
Mercantilism
Pro-Choice
Settlement House Movement
11. The policy used by the British before the War of 1812 wherein the British stopped US vessels and removed sailors from them to be used on British naval vessels. it was also used to a limited extent by the French during this same period. It was one of
Impressment
Indentured Servitude
Family Values
Nativism
12. The series of violent reactions to police brutality - poor living conditions - assassinations - and high unemployment from 1964-1968. The National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission) called them a reaction to the rising expecta
Rock and Roll
Urban Riots
Dollar Diplomacy
Free Soil Position
13. The power of the president to reject legislation. The US Congress can override a veto by the US president if it can pass the legislation by a two-thirds majority.
Sit-Ins
Telegraph
Universal Suffrage
Veto
14. Middle-class reform movement of the first decades of the 20th century which sought to widen political participation - eradicate corruption - and apply scientific and technological expertise to social ills.
Speakeasies
Progressive Movement
Sharecropping
Baby Boom
15. A conference attended by leaders of two or more nations.
Progressive Movement
War on Poverty
Veto
Summit Meeting
16. 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
Weapons of Mass Destruction
Royal Colony
Speakeasies
Teach-Ins
17. Sensationalist - lurid - and often falsified accounts of events printed by newspapers and magazines to attract readers.
Yellow Journalism
Rugged Individualism
Pro-Life
Veto
18. Historiography is the study of how history is written. Historians in the 1950s-consensus historians-in general argued that America was the world's great democracy that only did good in the world and had no conflicts at home. Largely due to the effort
Division of Powers
Conflict Historiography
Referendum
Unicameral Legislature
19. 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
Stagflation
McCarthyism
Progressive Movement
Backlash
20. 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
Poll Tax
Compact Theory
Impeachment
Capitalism
21. The result of a general shift in society in the 1920s characterized by a greater emphasis on purchasing goods.
Kyoto Protocol
Puppet Regimes
Consumer Society
Summit Meeting
22. A legislature composed of two houses. The US Congress - composed of the Senate and the House of Representatives - is an example.
Bicameral Legislature
Socialism
New Frontier
Excise Tax
23. Agreements employers forced potential employees to sign in which the employees agreed not to join unions or go on strike.
Juvenile Delinquency
Free Silverites
Nationalism
Yellow-dog Contract
24. A tax placed on imports; its purpose is to make domestic goods cheaper to keep out foreign goods.
Checks and Balances
Protective Tariff
Appeasement
Internal Improvements
25. 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.
Guerrilla War
Subprime Mortgage
Domino Theory
Grandfather Clauses
26. The railroad route connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans that was completed in 1869.
Transcontinental Railway
Division of Powers
Navigation Acts
Family Values
27. A type of economic system in which the state controls the production and distribution of certain products that it deems necessary for the good of the people.
Scab
Planter
Socialism
Margin Buying
28. A tax that is added onto the price of goods produced - sold - or distributed within a country; for example - sales tax.
Unicameral Legislature
Democracy
Excise Tax
Colonization
29. A practice used in colonial America in which a person entered into a contract for a specified period of time with another in exchange for the payment of his or her passage to the New World. The indentured servant was sometimes promised some land afte
Indentured Servitude
Subprime Mortgage
Universal Manhood Suffrage
Pro-Life
30. The killing of African Americans - usually by hanging - carried out by white mobs primarily in the Southern states.
Lynching
Patroonship
Technological Unemployment
Isolationism
31. A term coined in the 1950s to describe illegal or undesirable behavior by teenagers.
Juvenile Delinquency
Industrial Unionism
Mercantilism
Summit Meeting
32. A belief in the ability of people to achieve success in difficult times by calling on their own abilities and resources without the interference of the government. Herbert Hoover subscribed to this notion; it affected the development of governmental
Bimetallists
Rugged Individualism
Free Labor
Stagflation
33. Opposition to communism. Extreme anti-communism was manifested in the "Red Scare" of the 1920s and McCarthyism of the 1950s.
Puppet Regimes
Anti-Communism
Cotton Gin
Socialism
34. Laws enacted in many states based on religious bans of personal behavior deemed immoral; for example - law prohibiting the sale of alcohol on Sundays.
Abolitionism
Cabinet
Poll Tax
Blue Laws
35. A form of nonviolent protest used by antiwar and antisegregation activists. Protesters would take over buildings - camp out in front of administration offices - or sit at lunch counters and demand to be served on an integrated basis. The first sit-in
Sit-Ins
Culture of the Quarters
Navigation Acts
Impeachment
36. The practice of paying for goods at regular intervals - usually with interest added to the balance - associated with consumption in the 1920s.
Medicare
Margin Buying
Installment Plans
Mercantilism
37. The movement to form labor organizations made up of skilled wokrers within a particular field.
Telegraph
Craft Unionism
Robber Baron
Imperialism
38. George W. Bush's belief in the propriety of using unilateral preemptive military strikes-essentially a preventive war- to fight terrorism.
Bush Doctrine
Hawks
Indentured Servitude
Family Values
39. Trade that takes place between states. Under the US Constitution - the power to regulate interstate commerce is delegated to the Congress.
Joint Stock Company
Interstate Commerce
Mercantilism
Compact Theory
40. The joining together of companies engaged in similar business practices to create a virtual monopoly.
Nationalism
Dollar Diplomacy
Horizontal Integration
Democracy
41. Derisive term for Northerners who went to the South during Reconstruction to promote reform or to profit from it.
Theory of Perpetual Union
Carpetbaggers
Indentured Servitude
Impeachment
42. 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
Suburbia
Margin Buying
Theory of Perpetual Union
Baby Boom
43. Large plantation-type farm established by the Dutch along the Hudson River in the 1600s.
Ratification
Contraband of War
Protectorate
Patroonship
44. A term used to describe an investment with a reward that can be great-if the investment is successful. It contributed to the stock market crash of 1929.
Impeachment
Two-Party System
Speculation
Excise Tax
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
Scalawags
Reserved Powers Clause
Summit Meeting
46. Provisions in the voting laws in Southern states following Reconstruction designed to allow whites who could not pass literacy tests to vote. The grandfather clause gave the right to vote to people whose grandfathers had been eligible to vote-a provi
Royal Colony
Grandfather Clauses
Civil Rights Movement
Ethnic Cleansing
47. Laws made by the British government restricting colonial trade of sugar and tobacco to any country other than England or by any means other than on British ships.
Cold War
Elastic Clause
Navigation Acts
Confederation
48. Residential communities near large urban centers. Although suburbs existed in the 19th century - they became a widespread social phenomenon in the 1950s.
Ecology
Suburbia
Manifest Destiny
Barbed Wire
49. A country whose affairs are partly controlled by a stronger country. The US established several protectorates - such as Cuba - in the 20th century.
Craft Unionism
Internal Improvements
Protectorate
Anthracite Coal
50. 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.
Proprietary Colony
Confederation
Royal Colony
Cowboys