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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. 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.
Isolationism
Imperialism
Scab
Jim Crow
2. A country whose affairs are partly controlled by a stronger country. The US established several protectorates - such as Cuba - in the 20th century.
Nationalism
Poll Tax
Blue Laws
Protectorate
3. The name used by the administration of John F. Kennedy to describe its proposed programs for the nation.
Internal Improvements
Supply-Side Economics
Blacklist
New Frontier
4. 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.
Injunction
Bush Doctrine
Lynching
Temperance Movement
5. An organization and discussion method employed by feminists in the late 1960s and early 1970s in which women would exchange experiences of discrimination - read radical analyses of oppression - and develop an understanding that the patriarchal or som
Consciousness-Raising Groups
Ecology
Democracy
Separation of Powers
6. A treaty in which the parties agree not to attack each other unless attacked first.
Speculation
Sit-Ins
Planter
Nonaggression Treaty
7. A term coined in the 1950s to describe illegal or undesirable behavior by teenagers.
Navigation Acts
White Flight
Internal Improvements
Juvenile Delinquency
8. The process of acquiring new territories
Bicameral Legislature
Bush Doctrine
Bimetallists
Annexation
9. Agricultural labor system in the South following the era of slavery wherein a sharecropper could farm a piece of land in return for giving the landowner a share - usually half - of the crop.
Sharecropping
Short-staple Cotton
Nativism
Self-Governing Colony
10. 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.
Juvenile Delinquency
Direct Primary
Great Society
Progressive Movement
11. 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
Urban Riots
Conflict Historiography
Social Mobility
Spoils System
12. The movement to form labor organizations that represent every worker in a single industry - regardless of his or her level of skill.
Industrial Unionism
Tariff
Abolitionism
Social Gospel
13. 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
Separation of Powers
Muckrackers
Second Wave of Feminism
Advertising
14. Residential communities near large urban centers. Although suburbs existed in the 19th century - they became a widespread social phenomenon in the 1950s.
Initiative
Impeachment
Boston Tea Party
Suburbia
15. 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
Contraband of War
Injunction
Loose Constructionist
Pro-Choice
16. 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.
Referendum
Unicameral Legislature
Jim Crow
Court Packing Scheme
17. A tax placed on imports; its purpose is to make domestic goods cheaper to keep out foreign goods.
Referendum
Protective Tariff
Royal Colony
Planter
18. Opposition to communism. Extreme anti-communism was manifested in the "Red Scare" of the 1920s and McCarthyism of the 1950s.
Elastic Clause
Anti-Communism
Headright System
Free Silverites
19. A term used to describe the ability of people to move within the social framework of a society. If the social system provides opportunities for a person born into a lower social class to move to an upper one - or vice versa - a characteristic of the
Industrial Unionism
Social Mobility
Consciousness-Raising Groups
Carpetbaggers
20. A policy developed by the Spanish in the 1500s in which the Spanish settlers in the New World were permitted to use Native American labor if the settlers promised to attempt to Christianize them. It led to the exploitation of the Native Americans
Self-Governing Colony
Encomienda
Democracy
Margin Buying
21. Government policy of noninterference in business practices and in individuals economic affairs; literally translated as "to let do."
Boston Tea Party
Laissez-Faire
Theocracy
Reserved Powers Clause
22. The promotion of products in various media. Modern advertising - employing psychology - expert testimony - and other innovations developed in the 1920s.
Indentured Servitude
Free Labor
Loose Constructionist
Advertising
23. 1) The political theory that the people hold the fundamental power in a democracy 2) The proposal by Steven Douglas in the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act stating that the people of the territory of Kansas and Nebraska could decide though their representati
Poll Tax
Popular Sovereignty
Isolationism
Industrial Unionism
24. 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
Cold War
Indentured Servitude
Initiative
Stagflation
25. 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
Assembly Line
Containment
Court Packing Scheme
Literacy Tests
26. 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.
Containment
Tariff
Escalation
Imperialism
27. 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.
Capitalism
Appeasement
Referendum
Protectorate
28. Reading tests required in some Southern states before people were allowed to register to vote. They were mainly intended to prevent African Americans from voting.
Literacy Tests
New Immigration
Ratification
Theocracy
29. The political events of the 1960s divided the country in many ways. There were pro-Vietnam hawks and anti-Vietnam doves - those who supported the counterculture of liberated sex and drugs and those who did not - those who favored American involvement
Jim Crow
Theory of Perpetual Union
Craft Unionism
Culture Wars
30. The killing of African Americans - usually by hanging - carried out by white mobs primarily in the Southern states.
Conflict Historiography
Strict Constructionist
Lynching
Medicaid
31. 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
Assembly Line
Strict Constructionist
Baby Boom
Popular Sovereignty
32. Art and literature that seek to depict the commonplace in a plausible and direct manner.
Gender Gap
Imperialism
Short-staple Cotton
Realist Movement
33. 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
Specie Circular
Trusts
Rugged Individualism
Black Codes
34. The political belief that America's obvious future was to "o'er spread the continent -" in the words of John O'Sullivan in 1846. A corollary was that Americans would bring democracy to the "ignorant and inferior" peoples of the West. The Mexican War
Isolationism
Mercantilism
Interstate Commerce
Manifest Destiny
35. 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.
Checks and Balances
Rock and Roll
Black Power
Speakeasies
36. 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
Mortgage-Backed Securities
Self-Governing Colony
Assembly Line
Interchangeable Parts
37. The movement to form labor organizations made up of skilled wokrers within a particular field.
Puppet Regimes
Patroonship
Bimetallists
Craft Unionism
38. 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
Backlash
Salutary Neglect
Cotton Gin
Mass Production
39. The movement to end slavery. There were many points of view on the subject. Immediate abolitionism advocated ending slavery everywhere and refusing to cooperate with the political process (William Lloyd Garrison). Political abolitionism advocated an
Abolitionism
Industrial Unionism
Black Codes
Unicameral Legislature
40. 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.
Jim Crow
Socialism
Lynching
Colonization
41. 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
Ethnic Cleansing
Court Packing Scheme
Sit-Ins
War on Poverty
42. Laws enacted in many states based on religious bans of personal behavior deemed immoral; for example - law prohibiting the sale of alcohol on Sundays.
Vertical Integration
Rugged Individualism
Baby Boom
Blue Laws
43. People who illegally manufactured - sold - or transported alcoholic beverages during the Prohibition period.
Indentured Servitude
Bootleggers
Installment Plans
Capitalism
44. Hit and run tactics combined with hiding and ambushing the enemy. The soldier would live off the land and population in an area so that he or she need not carry many supplies. The Americans learned this from the Indians in colonial times and used it
New Immigration
Universal Suffrage
Culture Wars
Guerrilla War
45. Large plantation-type farm established by the Dutch along the Hudson River in the 1600s.
Cold War
Patroonship
Blacklist
Settlement House Movement
46. A type of colony controlled by the king. The crown chose the governor to run the colony.
Royal Colony
Militarism
Nationalism
Imperialism
47. Laws passed in the Southern states immediately after the Civil War to restrict the movements and limit the rights of African Americans.
Anti-Communism
Social Mobility
Jim Crow
Black Codes
48. A high tax placed on imports. Its purpose is to make domestic goods cheaper than foreign goods - thus "protecting" domestic industry.
Theory of Perpetual Union
Poll Tax
Protective Tariff
Socialism
49. A legislature composed of two houses. The US Congress - composed of the Senate and the House of Representatives - is an example.
Encomienda
Initiative
Weapons of Mass Destruction
Bicameral Legislature
50. Worker organization formed to press for workplace demands - such as better wages and safer working conditions.
White Flight
Unions
Impeachment
Appeasement