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Gov Ch2-V



Multiple Choice
Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
 

 1. 

A/An _____ is a legislature whose members are individuals who represent the population
a.
executive commission
c.
jury
b.
representative assembly
d.
presidential department
 

 2. 

A model
a.
substitute
c.
prototype
b.
session
d.
term
 

 3. 

A _____ was a supporter of ratifying the first Constitution and of creating a federal union. Were proponents of strong central government.
a.
Democrat
c.
Anti-Federalist
b.
Republican
d.
Federalist
 

 4. 

The legal authority of the officials, acts, and institutions of government, conferred by the people on the grounds that the government's actions are an appropriate use of power and that the government is a legally constituted authority.
a.
contract
c.
writ
b.
legitimacy
d.
autonomous
 

 5. 

A _____ is a group of states or nations permanently allied for a common purpose. Its central government is usually much less powerful than its individual components' governments. The United Nations is one example.
a.
bicameral state
c.
nation
b.
unicameral state
d.
confederation
 

 6. 

An organized refusal by consumers to buy specific goods, usually in protest against certain conditions of production or manufacturing.
a.
convention
c.
boycott
b.
veto
d.
cloture
 

 7. 

America's first written constitution which called for a representative assembly, made up of elected representatives from each town to serve in that assembly and to make laws. It also called for the popular election of a governor and judges.
a.
Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
c.
Declaration of Independence
b.
Articles of Confederation
d.
U.S. Constitution
 

 8. 

_____ is the process by which Congress determines which public policy questions it will debate or consider.
a.
a straw vote
c.
a cloture
b.
agenda setting
d.
a veto
 

 9. 

Trade between two or more states.
a.
intrastate commerce
c.
vouchers
b.
mercantilism
d.
interstate commerce
 

 10. 

Roger Sherman's plan to resolve the large-state/small-state controversy during the Constitutional Convention. He proposed a bicameral legislature in which representation in the lower chamber (the House of Representatives) would be based on population, and each state, regardless of size, would have an equal number of representatives in the upper chamber (the Senate).
a.
Pennsylvania Plan
c.
Virginia Plan
b.
Great Compromise
d.
New Jersey Plan
 

 11. 

A plan proposed by William Paterson during the Constitutional Convention, which called for equal representation by all states (thereby favoring the smaller states).
a.
Virginia Plan
c.
New Jersey Plan
b.
Maryland Plan
d.
Pennsylvania Plan
 

 12. 

status quo
a.
The status of a quorum
c.
The existing state of affairs.
b.
The status of the passage of a congressional bill
d.
Changes in government action
 

 13. 

A document that stated that laws were to be made for the general good of the people, drawn up by Pilgrim leaders in 1620
a.
English Bill of Rights
c.
Mayflower Compact
b.
American Bill of Rights
d.
Magna Carta
 

 14. 

A document issued by a government that grants rights to a person, group of persons, or a corporation to carry on a certain activity.
a.
character
c.
trust
b.
charter
d.
conviction
 

 15. 

Held in 1774, the _____ was the first formal assembly of the delegates from 12 of the 13 colonies (excluding Rhode Island). The Congress convened in Philadelphia from September 5 to October 26, during which period it adopted the Declaration of Rights and Grievances to protest Great Britain's enactment of the Coercive Acts against Massachusetts.
a.
Virginia Legislative Session
c.
Massachusetts Convention
b.
First Continental Congress
d.
Second Continental Congress
 

 16. 

The _____ , held from May 1775 to early 1781, established the Continental Army and led the colonies throughout the American Revolution. It is best remembered for its adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. It was succeeded by the Confederation Congress after the adoption of the Articles of Confederation in 1781
a.
Second Continental Congress
c.
Independence Convention
b.
Constitutional Convention
d.
First Continental Congress
 

 17. 

_____ were those who opposed the U.S. Constitution during the fight over its ratification. They believed the Constitution was class-based, that it would undermine state powers, and that it would decay basic civil rights.
a.
Federalists
c.
Republicans
b.
Democrats
d.
Anti-Federalists
 

 18. 

A compromise reached during the Constitutional Convention in which it was agreed that _____ of all slaves were to be counted both for tax purposes and for representation in the House of Representatives.
a.
three-quarters
c.
three-fifths
b.
one-half
d.
one-quarter
 

 19. 

Restrictions placed on colonial activity from 1651 to 1750 by Great Britain, which include the condition that only English ships could be used for trade within the British Empire
a.
Declaratory Act
c.
Boston Tea Party
b.
Navigation Act
d.
Stamp Act
 

 20. 

The name of the national legislative body in countries like England, Canada  and France.
a.
House of Representatives
c.
House of the Senate
b.
Lower Chamber
d.
Parliament
 

 21. 

A form of government in which the state serves public instead of private interests,  is based on the use of a written document that strictly controls the powers of government, such as the U.S. Constitution. General public understanding of this role also constrains the government's power. This system uses institutional checks to make sure the government does not overstep its bounds
a.
limited government
c.
unlimited government
b.
autonomous government
d.
divine right of kings
 

 22. 

The great charter that King John of England was forced to sign in 1215 as protection against the absolute powers of the monarchy. It included such fundamental rights as trial by jury and due process of law.
a.
Penn Treaty
c.
Mayflower Compact
b.
Magna Carta
d.
English Bill of Rights
 

 23. 

To formally approve or give final consent to a constitution, constitutional amendment, or treaty
a.
ratify
c.
veto
b.
cloture
d.
vote
 

 24. 

Individuals who feel strong loyalty and devotion to their nation.
a.
abortionists
c.
anti-nationalist
b.
nationalists
d.
internationalists
 

 25. 

Complaint
a.
veto
c.
grievance
b.
cloture
d.
filibuster
 

 26. 

Trade between two or more states
a.
intrastate commerce
c.
multi-lateral state exchange
b.
interstate commerce
d.
intrastate trade
 

 27. 

Government bodies primarily responsible for the making of laws
a.
judicial bodies
c.
congressional perks
b.
executive departments
d.
legislatures
 

 28. 

People who are authorized to speak, vote, or otherwise act on behalf of others. (Representatives from state political parties to a national party convention serve as _____ to that convention.)
a.
members
c.
presidents
b.
boards of directors
d.
delegates
 

 29. 

A 1787 congressional act that established a basic pattern for how states should govern new territories north of the Ohio River
a.
Monroe Doctrine
c.
Mississippi Valley Ordinance
b.
Northwest Ordinance
d.
Declaritory Act
 

 30. 

A _____ is a group or bloc within a political party or the legislature whose members work together to achieve some special interest or advance a certain position.
a.
nationalist
c.
faction
b.
cloture
d.
delegate
 

 31. 

A tax, imposed by the British Parliament in 1764, on all sugar imported into the American colonies
a.
Sweet and Low Act
c.
Sweet Tax
b.
Sugar Act
d.
Confectionery Act
 

 32. 

The legal authority of the officials, acts, and institutions of government, conferred by the people on the grounds that the government's actions are an appropriate use of power and that the government is a legally constituted authority.
a.
illegitimacy
c.
writ of habeas-corpus
b.
legal-writ
d.
legitimacy
 

 33. 

Goods that a nation produces and sells to other nations
a.
imports
c.
exports
b.
trade
d.
transports
 

 34. 

A _____ organization has two sections or, literally, "rooms." The Congress is a _____ institution, since it has two houses: the Senate and the House of Representatives.
a.
legislative
c.
bicameral
b.
unicameral
d.
parliamentary
 

 35. 

An act passed by the British Parliament in 1765 which placed the first direct tax on the colonies. The _____  required the use of tax stamps on all legal documents, newspapers, pamphlets, playing cards, and certain business agreements.
a.
Legal Document Act
c.
Stamp Act
b.
Intolerable Act
d.
Postage Stamp Act
 

 36. 

Government bodies primarily responsible for the making of laws.
a.
judicial bodies
c.
legislature
b.
executive bodies
d.
departments
 

 37. 

A fifteen-resolution plan proposed by Governor Edmund Randolph during the Constitutional Convention. It recommended an entirely new national government favoring the larger states; it included a bicameral legislature, a national executive branch, and a national court system.
a.
Pennsylvania Plan
c.
New Jersey Plan
b.
Articles of Confederation
d.
Virginia Plan
 



 
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