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Test your basic knowledge |
SAT Subject Test: U.S. History Vocab
Start Test
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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. Tax paid by those wishing to vote in several Southern states after Reconstruction. It was designed to limit political participation by African Americans.
Two-Party System
Settlement House Movement
Domino Theory
Poll Tax
2. A list of persons - often secretly circulated - who are disapproved of and are to be denied employment or other benefits.
Judicial Review
Conflict Historiography
Salutary Neglect
Blacklist
3. 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.
Culture Wars
Kyoto Protocol
Bush Doctrine
Strict Constructionist
4. 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.
Suburbia
Delegated Powers
Spoils System
Settlement House Movement
5. An economic system in which a colony exists for the good of the mother country. The colony's role is to provide raw materials for the mother country (especially products that the mother country cannot produce itself) and serve as a market for the goo
Mercantilism
Supply-Side Economics
Assembly Line
Planter
6. Large corporations created by the consolidation of competing companies to form a monopoly or near monopoly.
Social Mobility
Direct Democracy
Universal Suffrage
Trusts
7. Techniques used in industry to produce large quantities of goods using interchangeable parts and moving assembly lines. Elements of mass production were developed in the 19th century; the process was perfected by Henry Ford in the 1910s.
Unions
Mass Production
Theory of Perpetual Union
Spoils System
8. 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
Transcontinental Railway
Teach-Ins
Summit Meeting
Escalation
9. An agricultural system in which farm workers supply their own tools - rent land - and have more control over their work than agrarian wage workers.
Socialism
McCarthyism
Tenant Farming
Reserved Powers Clause
10. A court order stopping a specific act - often used against unions to end a strike.
Bootleggers
Nativism
Injunction
War on Poverty
11. The study of the environment.
Yellow-dog Contract
Protective Tariff
Blacklist
Ecology
12. The practice of victorious candidates distributing government jobs to friends and supporters rather than to the most qualified people. Andre Jackson gave his supporters the spoils of victory - whereas John Quincy Adams by and large did not.
Protectorate
Blacklist
Universal Manhood Suffrage
Spoils System
13. Agreements employers forced potential employees to sign in which the employees agreed not to join unions or go on strike.
Medicare
Judicial Review
Trusts
Yellow-dog Contract
14. The movement to form labor organizations that represent every worker in a single industry - regardless of his or her level of skill.
Industrial Unionism
Loose Constructionist
Consumer Society
Alliances
15. Critical term for the owners of the big business of the Gilded Age who accumulated great wealth and power.
Robber Baron
Settlement House Movement
Judicial Review
Vietnam Revisionism
16. Populists and "Silver Democrats" who in the 1890s argued in favor of an immense increase in silver coinage as a way of stimulating a faltering economy. See Bimetallists.
Free Silverites
Cowboys
Dollar Diplomacy
Unlawful Combatants
17. 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.
Craft Unionism
Bootleggers
Social Gospel
Second Reconstruction
18. Large plantation-type farm established by the Dutch along the Hudson River in the 1600s.
Talkies
Patroonship
Sharecropping
Teenagers
19. Art and literature that seek to depict the commonplace in a plausible and direct manner.
Craft Unionism
Installment Plans
Realist Movement
Speakeasies
20. A system of government in which the religious leaders rule. A church-state - where the church is the government - is an example.
Judicial Review
Mortgage-Backed Securities
Impressment
Theocracy
21. An element of President Truman's 1947 Federal Employees Loyalty and Security Program - which was designed to weed out communists and other "subversives" from government employment.
Universal Manhood Suffrage
Loyalty Oaths
Yellow-dog Contract
Free Soil Position
22. A type of democracy in which the people vote on the actions of the government - rather than electing representatives.
Checks and Balances
Direct Democracy
Democracy
Popular Sovereignty
23. Progressive-era reform that created a mechanism for voters to approve or reject legislation placed on the ballot. It was designed to weaken the power of entrenched political machines.
Royal Colony
Mestizos
Referendum
Homesteaders
24. 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.
Social Gospel
Teenagers
Cold War
Progressive Movement
25. Political party organizations that run cities and are often associated with corruption and undemocratic practices. The most notorious example was New York's Tammary Hall Democratic club of the Gilded age.
Patroonship
Political Machines
Suburbia
Free Blacks
26. A person who believes in the broad interpretation of the US Constitution; that is - that the Constitution does not have to be interpreted word by word. Alexander Hamilton supported this idea.
Protective Tariff
New Frontier
New Left
Loose Constructionist
27. 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
Yellow-dog Contract
Free Silverites
Short-staple Cotton
Joint Stock Company
28. A grouping of nations where each one pledges mutual support to the others. This support is usually defensive in nature. The formation of alliances was a nunderlying cause of WWI.
Alliances
Universal Manhood Suffrage
Bicameral Legislature
Mass Production
29. The organizations and events in the 20th century that collectively pressured federal - state - and local governments and businesses to grant equal rights to blacks and other minorities.
Consciousness-Raising Groups
Scab
Civil Rights Movement
Impressment
30. 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.
Pragmatism
Militarism
Sit-Ins
Unicameral Legislature
31. 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.
Anti-Communism
Loose Constructionist
Settlement House Movement
Speculation
32. An indictment or formal charge brought by the legislative body against a government official - especially the president - in an attempt to remove him or her from office. If the House of Representatives determines that a president has committed acts t
Free Labor
Tariff
Separation of Powers
Impeachment
33. 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.
Domino Theory
Intrastate Commerce
Urban Riots
Alliances
34. Government policy of noninterference in business practices and in individuals economic affairs; literally translated as "to let do."
Temperance Movement
Laissez-Faire
Muckrackers
Domino Theory
35. Derogatory term used by the labor movement to describe workers who cross picket lines
Scab
Mestizos
Bicameral Legislature
Hawks
36. Lincoln's Civil War policy of treating runaway slaves as enemy war property. He accepted the slaves as a way to hurt the Southern cause. They were freed and employed as aides to the Union army until Lincoln started recruiting black troops after the E
White Flight
Cotton Gin
Contraband of War
Internal Improvements
37. A term used to describe a person who believes that the Consitution must be interpreted word by word. Thomas Jefferson believed in strict construction of the Constitution.
Strict Constructionist
Compact Theory
Isolationism
Mass Production
38. Trade that takes place between states. Under the US Constitution - the power to regulate interstate commerce is delegated to the Congress.
Interstate Commerce
Free Soil Position
Horizontal Integration
Black Power
39. 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
Alliances
Juvenile Delinquency
Grandfather Clauses
Teach-Ins
40. 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.
Abolitionism
Free Silverites
Telegraph
New Frontier
41. Progressive political reform in the early 1900s that enabled voters to introduce legislation.
Political Machines
Initiative
Progressive Movement
New Frontier
42. The political position advocating sending free blacks to Liberia in Africa to reduce the number of them in the country-the more blacks that were freed - the fewer there would be in America. It was seen as a way of alleviating the danger of slave insu
Colonization
Lynching
Interchangeable Parts
Direct Primary
43. 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
Sit-Ins
Mass Production
Pro-Life
Unlawful Combatants
44. The mixed race of people that developed as a result of the intermarriage of the Spanish and Native American populations in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Mestizos
Assembly Line
Impeachment
Progressive Movement
45. 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
Manifest Destiny
Consumer Society
White Flight
46. 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
Weapons of Mass Destruction
Conflict Historiography
Containment
Veto
47. The traditions - language - and modes of behavior of the field hands who lived together in slave quarters. They practiced many forms of resistance to the wills of their masters - told each other African-derived tales - sand spirituals - and practiced
Interchangeable Parts
Political Machines
Culture of the Quarters
Cotton Gin
48. Cotton that grew inland in the Black Belt of the South - an area characterized by its dark soil. Short-staple cotton could not be grown profitably until the cotton gin was invented.
Pro-Choice
Short-staple Cotton
Gender Gap
Abolitionism
49. The series of laws designed to create separation between the races. These were by and large Southern state laws made constitutional by the Supreme Court decision Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896.
Summit Meeting
Universal Suffrage
Jim Crow
Kyoto Protocol
50. The political idea that the West should be free of slavery. In 1846 - David Wilmot wrote the proviso that there "shall be no slavery or involuntary servitude in any territory acquired from Mexico -" which galvanized the antislavery forces in Congress
Free Soil Position
Cold War
Direct Democracy
Speculation