Aboriginal

native to a region; describes people inhabiting a land before the arrival of colonists

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Aborigines

indigenous people of Australia

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Acid rain

rain polluted with chemicals

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Agrarian

a term describing a society that is based on agriculture

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Allied Powers

Britain, France, Russia; those nations involved in World War I that were led by Great Britain , Russia, and France; the United States later joined the Allied Powers

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Allies

countries / nations who are friends and support one another

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Amazon River

A massive river in South America; more water drains out of the Amazon than out of any other river on Earth

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Andes Mountains

The mountain range along the western side of South America more than 5,000 miles long, and home to the highest mountains in the Western Hemisphere

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Annex

to add territory; to take over a piece of another nation's land

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Arable

land that is able to be farmed

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Anti-Semitism

prejudice against Jewish people

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Archipelago

a chain of islands

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Arctic

the region around the North Pole

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Aristocracy, aristocratic

having to do with royalty/monarchy

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Armistice

a temporary halt in fighting; a truce

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Astronomy

the study of stars and their positions

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Atacama Desert

a desert region on the coast of northern Chile, sparsely inhabited, but rich in minerals

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Atahualpa

leader of the Incas (known as "Sapa Inca"). During the Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire, the Spaniard Francisco Pizarro captured him and used him to control the Inca empire before executing him.

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Authoritarian

a word that describes a political system in which people of a country must obey the ruling power

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Autocratic or Autocracy

government in which one person possesses unlimited power and the citizen has little, if any, role in the government (example: Cuba). Most dictators maintain their position through inheritance of military power (fear, violence). People who try to speak out against the government are often silenced through the use of power.

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Ayers Rock

a giant stone monolith in Australia's Northern Territory; one of the country's most famous natural features

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Axis Powers

an alliance of Germany, Italy, and Japan that fought against the Allies during World War II

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Aztec

native people of central Mexico whose civilization was at its height at the time of the Spanish conquest in the early 16th century

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Barter

to exchange, or trade, one good for another

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Battle of Stalingrad

World War II battle considered to be the bloodiest in human history; it last from 1942 to 1943

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Bering Land Bridge

a narrow area of land that once joined Siberia to Alaska

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Berlin Wall

a wall in Germany that separated East and West Berlin from 1961 to 1989

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Bicameral

a legislature with two branches

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British Commonwealth

a voluntary association of independent nations and dependent territories linked by historical ties as part of the former British empire, and cooperation on matters of mutual concern like economics and trade.

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British North America Trade Act

a law passed in 1867 under which Canadian colonies united to form a new country, governed by a new constitution

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Cabinet

a group of people appointed by a president or prime minister to give advice and help run the government

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Canadian Shield

a plateau region of eastern Canada extending from the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River northward to the Arctic Ocean

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Capital goods

equipment used by a company to produce other goods

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Capitalism

an economic system in which private owners control the production of goods and profit

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Caribbean Sea

a large body of water in the western Atlantic Ocean, to the south bordered by South America, to the west bordered by Central America, and to the north by Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic

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Cartography

the making of maps and charts

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Catholic

this word actually means "universal", but when capitalized, refers to the Roman Catholic church. Roman Catholics were some of the first Christians.

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Central Powers

Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, Bulgaria, when they fought against the Allied Powers during World War I.

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Chancellor

chief executive in Germany

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Chernobyl

a city in north central Ukraine where in 1986 a large Nuclear Power Plant exploded during stress testing causing the leakage of massive amounts of radiation

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Chief executive

the #1 person in charge of the country; we call ours PRESIDENT

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Christopher Columbus

believed that the Bahamas were part of Asia; was an Italian sailor who thought that if the world was round instead of flat, then you should be able to sail to India to buy spices by going west instead of east. Convinced the king and queen of Spain to give him 3 ships, let him try to prove that he was right. He did not get to India, he did find the islands of the Caribbean including present day Haiti

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Clandestine

to meet in secret

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Cold war

began in 1945, period of distrust between Soviet Union and its former allies in the West, particularly the United States; Germany was divided into two parts, East Germany and West Germany

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Colonization

to form a colony, to settle a colony

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Colony

a foreign area controlled by a country and contributing to its wealth; any people or territory separated from, but subject to, a ruling power

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Columbian Exchange

the widespread exchange of agricultural goods, livestock, slave labor, communicable diseases, and ideas between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres that occurred after 1492.

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Command economy

an economy that is planned and controlled by the central government

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Communism

an economic and political system in which the government owns all the businesses, and citizens have limited personal freedoms

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Concentration camps

prisons where civilians, political prisoners, and sometimes prisoners of war were held under harsh conditions

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Confederation

voluntary associations of independent states that, to secure some common purpose, agree to certain limitations on their freedom of action and establish some joint machinery of consultation or deliberation (example: European Union); voluntary association of states in which individual states hold more power than the central government

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Conquistador

a conqueror, especially one of the 16th century Spanish soldiers who defeated the Indian civilizations of Mexico, Central America, and Peru.

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Constitution

document written to describe the way a government of a country will be organized

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Commonwealth of Nations

weak association of member countries once part of the British Empire; also called the British Commonwealth

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Communist

describes a government that owns or controls most farms and businesses

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Confederation

voluntary associations of independent states that, to secure some common purpose, agree to certain limitations on their freedom of action and establish some joint machinery of consultation or deliberation (Example: European Union)

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Conquistador

a conqueror from Spain, an explorer who went to new countries; a conqueror, especially one of the 16th century Spanish soldiers who defeated the Indian civilizations of Mexico, Central America and Peru

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Constitution

document written to describe the way the government of a country will be organized; a document of basic laws that govern a country

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Constitutional monarchy

a form of government in which the power of the king or queen is limited by a constitution

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Consume

to buy, to use up, to purchase something that is for sale.

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Contaminated

poisoned, food not safe to eat, a place not safe to live in; could make a person sick, even kill them

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Cook, Captain James

claimed Australia for Great Britain; in 1770's had a ship named Endeavor

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Coral Sea

a body of water off the east coast of Australia, home o the Great Barrier Reef

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Cortez/Cortes

conquistador that Montezuma welcomed because he mistakenly thought Cortez was a god from a legend in their religion. Cortez was looking for gold and riches and was successful in overtaking the Aztec people.

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Coup

a French word that means to take over a government, to militarily overthrow the present government (pronounced KOO with no "p" sound)

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Coup d'etat

a military takeover of a government (pronounced KOO-DAY-TAH)

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Crusades

wars fought in the Middle East over land that was holy to Christians and Muslims; military expeditions sent by different Popes (leaders of the Catholic Church) to capture the Holy Land

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Cultural diffusion

the spread of language and traditions from one group to another

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Culture

the way of life of a group of people; includes language, customs, traditions, beliefs, and religious practices

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Currency

the type of money a country uses; a system of money

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Currency exchange

without a system of exchanging currencies it would be very difficult to conduct international trade; exchange rates provide a procedure for determining the value of one country's currency in the terms of another country's currency.

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Customs

rules of behavior that people follow within a culture

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Cyrillic alphabet

an alphabet that is used by Slavic languages (includes Russian). These Slavic languages that use the Cyrillic alphabet are in central and eastern Europe.

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Czars

another spelling of TSARS: what the king/emperor was called in Russia

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Czechoslovakia

a country in Europe that doesn't exist any more

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D-Day

the name given to the Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied Western Europe; it occurred on June 6, 1944

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Deciduous

trees that shed their leaves in the fall

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Deficit

when a governing body spends more money than it brings in

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Deforestation

the act or process of removing trees from or clearing a forest

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Demand

how many people want the goods available and what they are willing to pay for them

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Democracy / democratic

political system in which a country's people elect their leaders and rule by majority; a government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them directly or indirectly through a system of representation usually involving periodically held free elections. (Examples: United Kingdom, Germany, Mexico, Brazil, Canada, Australia)

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Denomination

a sect or group within a religion

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Densely populated

a place where a lot of people live; for example, a city is densely populated, farmland in the country is not densely populated

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Depression

buying and selling almost stops; wages fall; banks close; business slows; inflation rises; farmers lose land

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Dictator

someone who rules by fear or force, they have all the power, they don't share power with anybody, has complete rule

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Dictatorship

a form of government in which power is concentrated in the hands of one leader

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Dissent

means to disagree with

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Dissenter

a person who disagrees with (for example) the government or it's leader

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Diversity

a variety of different races, ethnic backgrounds, religious beliefs

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Domestic

describes industries or businesses that are in OUR country; foreign describes industries or businesses in countries other than our own

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Dominant

the most powerful, the strongest, the most type of people

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Dreaming

the time of creation in the Australian Aboriginal religion

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Economic depression

buying and selling almost stops; wages fall; banks close; business slows; inflation rises; farmers lose land

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Economic system

the way a country decides what goods will be produced, how they will be produced, and who will consume them

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Economy

the way in which people m a erpson eet their needs through the production, distribution, and the use of goods and services

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Elevation

how how a place is above sea level

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Embargos

prohibit trade with other nations; they bar a foreign nation's imports or ban exports to that nation or both; a ban on trade with another country for a political reason

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Emissions

the smoke that comes out smokestacks of factories, tailpipes of cars

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Empire

a group of nations or people ruled over by a sovereign/monarch (emperor/ empress, king/queen, etc.)

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England

used to be its own country by itself; now part of Great Britain which is part of United Kingdom

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English Channel

a body of water separating France and the United Kingdom

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Entrepreneurs

one who risks his or her own money, time, ideas, and energy to start and run a business; a person who is willing to take a risk to organize and operate a new business

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Ethnic

means having to do with race or culture

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Ethnic group

people in a region who share ancestry, language, and culture

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Euro

the currency of the European Union. One result of the EU is the creation of the EURO. Just as the United States has dollars ($), the European countries have their own currencies. The euro is the currency of most of the EU. Member countries can choose to give up their own currencies and exchange them for euros.

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European Union (EU)

established in 1990s; main goal is to strengthen the economic, political, and defense ties of member nations; it's goal is to create a singles European currency; also it is a system to remove tariff barriers and open trade between countries. An organization, evolved from the European Economic Community, that created one economic market out of the member nations' economies

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Exclusion zone

the area around Chernobyl, Ukraine where no one was allowed to live, travel, or "be' after the nuclear accident

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Executive

branch of government that includes the head of state (president, premier, prime minister, etc)

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Expedition

trip that's purpose is to explore

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Export

a product that one country sells to another

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Fascism

a totalitarian government that has complete control over its citizens' political, economic, religious, and cultural activities

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Federal

1. national level, government having to do with the entire country, not just the state; 2. characterized by or constituting a form of government in which power is divided between one central and several regional authorities. (Examples: Australia, Germany, Russia, Canada, Brazil, and Mexico)

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Federal parliamentary democracy

a system in which a central government is controlled by a democratically elected Parliament, such as in Australia