Word agricultural Definition type of economy based on farming (money is made by farming) (adverb) alliance group of countries that work together with a common goal (noun) amendment a change to the Constitution (noun) annex to add territory to one's own territory (verb) Anti-Semitism hostility (hatred) toward or the discrimination of Jewish people (noun) appeasement accepting demands in order to avoid conflict (verb) Aryan-Supremacy (noun) assembly line (noun) assimilate the belief that blonde haired, blue eyed, full blooded German people were the supreme (best) race and that all others were inferior a way to produce goods/products with machines and workers at an assigned task over and over again to absorb a group into the culture of a larger population (example: American Indians were forced to assimilate into "white" culture) (verb) black codes (noun) Blitzkrieg (noun) bootlegger (noun) laws passed in the South after the Civil War aimed at controlling freedmen and enabling plantation owners to exploit African American workers name given to the sudden, violent offensive attacks the Germans used during WWII; "lightning war" person who made, sold or transported alcohol illegally during Prohibition boycott (verb) capitalism (noun) carpetbaggers (noun) civil rights (noun) Cold War (noun) communism (noun) consumer goods (noun) containment (noun) corollary an act in which many people refuse to do something, usually to cause economic ($) problems an economic system based on private property and free enterprise (people have control) Northerners who went to the South after the Civil War to gain money and political power; also supported Reconstruction policies the rights that the Constitution entitles all people to as citizens, especially equal treatment under the law a struggle over political differences where there is no actual fighting between the countries an economic system based on the idea that farms and businesses should be owned in common by the workers who do the labor (government has control) product intended for personal use by consumers, such as cars or refrigerators the United States' plan to stop the spread of communism throughout the world (Cold War Era) an addition to a document (noun) default (noun) demographics (noun) depression (noun) the failure to meet an obligation, especially a financial one (failing to pay for something like a house or a car) data collected about a population (ex. age, gender, race, ethnicity, education) a period of low economic activity and widespread unemployment desegregate to include different racial groups into a community (verb) dictator a leader who rules with total authority, often in a cruel or brutal manner (noun) domination (noun) Domino Theory (noun) dry farming (noun) economic (adjective) ethnic groups (noun) fascism (noun) Federal Reserve the Soviet Union's plan to spread communism throughout the world (Cold War Era) the belief that if one nation in Asia fell to the communists, neighboring countries would follow way of farming where seeds are planted deep into the ground where there is some moisture relating to the economy of a country (how does the country make money?) a minority that speaks a different language or has different customs than the majority of a population a political system, led by a dictator, which calls for extreme nationalism and racism and no tolerance of opposition the government's bank (noun) financial resources money available to invest in a business (noun) foreign policy (noun) freedmen guidelines for how a country handles political (government) and economic (money) interactions with other countries African Americans who had been set free from slavery (noun) Freedom Riders (noun) group of African American and white college students who rode buses through southern states to challenge segregation laws genocide (noun) globalization (noun) Holocaust (noun) homestead (noun) Hoovervilles (noun) immigrant the deliberate (on purpose) destruction of a racial, political or cultural group linking countries through trade, information, technologies and communication the name given to the mass slaughter of Jews and other groups by the Nazis during WWII to acquire (receive) a piece of U.S. public land by living and cultivating (farming) it shantytowns or slums that developed during the Great Depression; nicknamed after President Hoover. a person who moves from one country to live in another (noun) imperialism (noun) industrial policy (idea) that allows stronger countries to take political and/or economic control over smaller, weaker countries type of economy based on factories (money is made with factory work) (adverb) industrialization the growth of businesses (noun) integrate (verb) internment camps (noun) interstate highway (noun) the process of including people of different racial groups throughout society the detention centers where Japanese Americans were moved and confined to during WWII highways that run through many states “Iron Curtain” (noun) island hopping (verb) isolationism the political and military barrier that isolated Soviet controlled countries of Eastern Europe after WWII a strategy used during WWII that called for attacking and capturing certain key islands and using these islands as bases to leapfrog to others a national policy (idea) of avoiding involvement in world problems (noun) Jim Crow laws (noun) kamikaze (noun) Lend-Lease (noun) mass media (noun) mass produce (verb) mechanize laws enforcing segregation of blacks and whites in the South after the Civil War during WWII, a Japanese suicide pilot whose mission was to crash into his target the act passed during WWII allowing the U.S. to sell, lend, or lease arms or other war supplies to any nation fighting the Axis Powers types of communication that reach large numbers of people, such as newspapers, radio, TV producing large quantities (amounts) of goods by using machines and the assembly line to use machines (verb) migrant worker (noun) migration a person who moves from place to place to find work harvesting fruits and vegetables a movement of a large number of people into a new homeland (verb) militarism the political idea of building up the nation's military (noun) monopoly (noun) total control of an industry by 1 person or 1 company national market (noun) nationalism market created when natural resources and other products are bought and transported from cities and states across the continent pride in your country (noun) natural resource (noun) useful materials found in nature, including water, vegetation, animals and minerals New Deal name given to the new laws aimed at relieving the Great Depression (noun) noncontiguous not connected (ex. Hawaii and Alaska) (noun) on margin (verb) to buy a stock by paying for only a fraction of the price and borrowing the rest ore a mineral mined for the valuable substance it contains, such as silver (noun) outsource to obtain goods and services from outside sources (other countries) (verb) pandemic (noun) passive resistance (noun) political an infectious disease that is spreading through populations around the world another name for non-violent protests used during the Civil Rights Movement relating to the government of a country (adjective) political corruption dishonest acts committed by people working for the government (noun) (federal, state, local levels) political machine (noun) an organization linked to a political party that often controlled local government political region a way of grouping places using their political boundaries (noun) primary sources (noun) Prohibition (noun) propaganda types of sources that give first -hand accounts of events (ex. photograph) a time period in U.S. history when the government put a ban on the production, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages information used to influence a person's opinions, thoughts or actions (noun) ratify to give official approval of a law, amendment, or treaty (verb) ration to give out scarce (hard to find) items on a limited basis (noun) Reconstruction (noun) reformer the period after the Civil War when the federal government ruled the Southern states in order to rebuild them and allow them back into the Union a person who works to reform (change) something (noun) reform to make changes (political, economic, and/or social changes) (verb) Renaissance a period of intellectual and artistic creativity (noun) reparations repayment for damages caused by war (noun) repeal to take away a law or amendment (verb) reservation (noun) an area of public land that is set aside for American Indians rural area characterized by farming or countryside communities (adjective) secondary sources types of sources that give second hand accounts of events (ex. (noun) textbook) segregate the process of separating people of different racial groups (verb) settlement house (noun) sharecropping (verb) sit-in (noun) slums (ghettos) institution (building) located in a poor neighborhood that provided numerous community services such as medical care, child care, libraries, and classes in English system of farming in which a farmer works land for an owner who provides equipment and seeds and receives a share of the crop a form of peaceful protest in which people occupied seats in a segregated facility poor, crowded, rundown urban neighborhoods (noun) social relating to a country’s society (people) (adjective) sodbuster nickname given to a Great Plains farmer (noun) speakeasy illegal clubs where people went to drink alcohol during Prohibition (noun) stock shares (pieces) of ownership a company sells in its business (noun) strike to stop working by workers to force an employer to meet demands (verb) suburb (noun) residential area built outside major cities as a result of improvement in transportation suffrage the right to vote (noun) sweatshop (noun) a factory where workers work long hours at low wages under unhealthy conditions tariff a tax on imported goods (noun) telecommunication the use of electronic systems to communicate over far distances (ex. (noun) the Internet) temperance the use of little or no alcoholic drinks; a movement that led to Prohibition (noun) tenement (noun) transcontinental a building in which several families rent rooms or apartments, often with little sanitation or safety across the continent (noun) unconstitutional to go against what the Constitution says (adjective) union (noun) urban labor organizations that work together to fight for better working conditions, better pay, etc. area characterized by city communities (adjective) urbanization the growth of cities (noun) vocational type of school that focuses on certain trades (jobs) (adjective) yellow journalism (adjective) type of writing which exaggerates events to attract a reader's attention Important Constitutional Amendments 13th (1865) Abolished slavery and involuntary servitude (indentured servants) 14th (1868) Granted citizenship to all people born or naturalized in the U.S., and ensures equal protection under the law for all citizens 15th (1870) Granted all males the right to vote 18th (1919) Prohibition began 19th (1920) Granted women the right to vote 21st (1933) Repealed Prohibition