|
a. spinning jenny |
||
|
b. cotton gin |
||
|
c. water frame |
||
|
d. power loom |
|
a. It prohibited the employment of children under the age of nine. |
||
|
b. It limited the working hours of adolescent workers to 12 hours. |
||
|
c. It allowed children between the ages of nine and 13 to be apprenticed to a family member. |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. It prevented women from working in the mines. |
||
|
b. It prevented boys under the age of 10 from working in the mines. |
||
|
c. It segregated male and female workers. |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. It was a customs union. |
||
|
b. It eliminated internal tariffs. |
||
|
c. It created a high protective tariff. |
||
|
d. It was part of a policy of economic nationalism. |
||
|
e. It was similar to the British free trade system. |
|
a. Women remained at home to rear children. |
||
|
b. Men became the primary bread-winners. |
||
|
c. Women earned wages from taking in cottage work. |
||
|
d. Men refused to work long hours in factories. |
||
|
e. The salary for both men and women increased. |
|
a. France and Russia used the state to promote economic growth. |
||
|
b. Continental European industrialists could borrow ideas from their British counterparts. |
||
|
c. Continental Europe had an immigrant workforce. |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. William Blake |
||
|
b. Andrew Ure |
||
|
c. Friedrich Engels |
||
|
d. Thomas Malthus |
||
|
e. David Ricardo |
|
a. The Watts steam engine |
||
|
b. The power loom |
||
|
c. Water frame |
||
|
d. The spinning jenny |
||
|
e. The puddling furnace |
|
a. Merchants |
||
|
b. Factory owners |
||
|
c. Railroad operators |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. Britain's overseas empire |
||
|
b. The Agricultural Revolution |
||
|
c. Internal tariffs |
||
|
d. Coal and iron deposits |
||
|
e. A strong credit market |
|
a. Vienna |
||
|
b. Paris |
||
|
c. Zurich |
||
|
d. Berlin |
||
|
e. Cologne |
|
a. Disease is caused by germs. |
||
|
b. Bacteria live in the air. |
||
|
c. Bacteria cannot be controlled except in laboratories. |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. Miasma |
||
|
b. Sewage |
||
|
c. Biogenesis |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. Pasteurization |
||
|
b. Vaccines |
||
|
c. The antiseptic principle |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. The electric street car |
||
|
b. Sewer systems |
||
|
c. Aqueducts |
||
|
d. All of the above |
|
a. It was a unified social class. |
||
|
b. It was comprised of physical laborers. |
||
|
c. It was comprised of several subgroups. |
||
|
d. Its subclasses developed different lifestyles and values. |
||
|
e. It had a labor aristocracy. |
|
a. Bacteria cause disease. |
||
|
b. Pasteurization destroys bacteria. |
||
|
c. Disease is spread by odors of decay. |
||
|
d. Harmful bacteria have specific life cycles. |
||
|
e. All of the above |
|
a. Diphtheria |
||
|
b. Typhoid |
||
|
c. Yellow Fever |
||
|
d. Typhus |
||
|
e. All of the above |
|
a. Industrialists |
||
|
b. Doctors |
||
|
c. Lawyers |
||
|
d. Small manufacturers |
||
|
e. All of the above |
|
a. Lack of running water |
||
|
b. Poor sanitation |
||
|
c. Authoritarian government |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. Marx believed that the interests of the middle and working classes are opposed. |
||
|
b. Marx believed that marriage should be abolished. |
||
|
c. Marx believed that the proletariat exploits the bourgeoisie. |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. Classicism |
||
|
b. The Enlightenment |
||
|
c. Emotional expression |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. Liberalism |
||
|
b. Conservatism |
||
|
c. Socialism |
||
|
d. Nationalism |
||
|
e. Marxism |
|
a. The history of society is the history of the contest between aristocracy and democracy. |
||
|
b. The history of society is the history of the contest between the state and the people. |
||
|
c. The history of society is the history of the contest between social classes. |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. A belief in the inevitability of human progress |
||
|
b. Laissez-faire economics |
||
|
c. Government non-intervention in social programs |
||
|
d. Representative government |
||
|
e. Regulation of the market |
|
a. Monarchy |
||
|
b. Aristocracy |
||
|
c. Republicanism |
||
|
d. Suppression of subversive ideas |
||
|
e. Empire |
|
a. Laissez-faire economics |
||
|
b. Abolition of private property |
||
|
c. Economic planning |
||
|
d. Economic equality |
||
|
e. Utopianism |
|
a. Britain received colonial outposts. |
||
|
b. Austria surrendered Belgium. |
||
|
c. The Bourbon monarchy was restored in France. |
||
|
d. France was required to pay war reparations. |
||
|
e. The German Confederation was created. |
|
a. Britain and France |
||
|
b. France and Italy |
||
|
c. Italy and Prussia |
||
|
d. Prussia and Russia |
||
|
e. Russia and Britain |
|
a. Edmund Burke |
||
|
b. Thomas Malthus |
||
|
c. David Ricardo |
||
|
d. Jeremy Bentham |
||
|
e. Adam Smith |
|
a. Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
||
|
b. William Wordsworth |
||
|
c. John Keats |
||
|
d. Victor Hugo |
||
|
e. Voltaire |
|
a. Klemens von Metternich |
||
|
b. Robert Castlereagh |
||
|
c. Friedrich List |
||
|
d. Charles Talleyrand |
||
|
e. Tsar Alexander I |
|
a. William I |
||
|
b. William Frederick IV |
||
|
c. Otto von Bismarck |
||
|
d. Friedrich Ebert |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. Four |
||
|
b. Five |
||
|
c. Six |
||
|
d. Seven |
||
|
e. Eight |
|
a. He abolished the National Assembly. |
||
|
b. He restored universal male suffrage. |
||
|
c. He began a massive public works program. |
||
|
d. He encouraged investment banking and railroad construction. |
||
|
e. He allowed workers the right to strike. |
|
a. army |
||
|
b. Duma |
||
|
c. Zemstvo |
||
|
d. serfs |
|
a. Separation of church and state |
||
|
b. Emancipation of the serfs |
||
|
c. Abolition of censorship |
||
|
d. Establishment of the Zemstvo |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. Italy was a unified state. |
||
|
b. Central Italy and Rome were ruled by an Italian monarch. |
||
|
c. Sardinia and Piedmont were ruled by the Pope. |
||
|
d. Lombardy and Venetia became part of Austria. |
|
a. Dreyfus was accused of treason. |
||
|
b. Dreyfus was a Jew. |
||
|
c. Dreyfus was an opponent of Emile Zola. |
||
|
d. Dreyfus was sentenced to life imprisonment. |
||
|
e. Dreyfus was accused of spying for Germany. |
|
a. Bureaucracy |
||
|
b. Foreign alliances |
||
|
c. Official language |
||
|
d. Standard form of currency |
||
|
e. Single nationality |
|
a. A democratic republic |
||
|
b. A federation of states ruled by the Pope |
||
|
c. A state led by Sardinia-Piedmont |
||
|
d. An Italian state incorporated into the Austrian Empire |
||
|
e. All of the above |
|
a. 1848 |
||
|
b. 1849 |
||
|
c. 1851 |
||
|
d. 1854 |
||
|
e. 1860 |
|
a. Capitalistic greed |
||
|
b. Cheap raw materials |
||
|
c. Good investments |
||
|
d. Advantageous markets |
||
|
e. All of the above |
|
a. Manchuria |
||
|
b. Nanking |
||
|
c. Shanghai |
||
|
d. Hong Kong |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. Afghanistan |
||
|
b. Egypt |
||
|
c. India |
||
|
d. South Africa |
||
|
e. Burma |
|
a. Laos |
||
|
b. Samoa |
||
|
c. Philippines |
||
|
d. Indonesia |
||
|
e. Hawaii |
|
a. Britain |
||
|
b. United States |
||
|
c. France |
||
|
d. Belgium |
||
|
e. Russia |
|
a. Africa |
||
|
b. East Asia |
||
|
c. Middle East |
||
|
d. Both A and B |
||
|
e. Both B and C |
|
a. Austria-Hungary |
||
|
b. Germany |
||
|
c. Russia |
||
|
d. Italy |
|
a. Manchuria |
||
|
b. Hong Kong |
||
|
c. Indochina |
||
|
d. India |
||
|
e. Egypt |
|
a. Alliances between African and European leaders |
||
|
b. Exploration |
||
|
c. Medical Advances |
||
|
d. Military Innovations |
|
a. Britain's Parliament ruled India. |
||
|
b. The British created a unified Indian state. |
||
|
c. The British abolished the caste system. |
||
|
d. The British mandated that Indian secondary schools teach classes in English. |
||
|
e. The British created the third largest railway network. |
|
a. Cochin China |
||
|
b. Burma |
||
|
c. Laos |
||
|
d. Tonkin |
||
|
e. Cambodia |
|
a. Nationalism |
||
|
b. Industrialization |
||
|
c. Socialism |
||
|
d. Both A and B |
||
|
e. Both B and C |
|
a. Russia |
||
|
b. Turkey |
||
|
c. Serbia |
||
|
d. Czechoslovakia |
||
|
e. France |
|
a. Axis Powers |
||
|
b. Allied Powers |
||
|
c. Three Emperors' League |
||
|
d. Triple Entente |
|
a. Arabic Pledge |
||
|
b. Zimmermann Telegram |
||
|
c. Sussex Pledge |
||
|
d. Treaty of Versailles |
|
a. That families forgo food rations once per week. |
||
|
b. That children work in factories. |
||
|
c. That women work in factories. |
||
|
d. That men work in jobs considered crucial for the war effort. |
|
a. France |
||
|
b. United States |
||
|
c. Germany |
||
|
d. Russia |
||
|
e. Britain |
|
a. Serbia |
||
|
b. Italy |
||
|
c. Turkey |
||
|
d. Belgium |
||
|
e. Switzerland |
|
a. Battle of Brittany |
||
|
b. Battle of the Somme |
||
|
c. Battle of the Marne |
||
|
d. Battle of Verdun |
||
|
e. Battle of Passchendaele |
|
a. Treaty of Paris |
||
|
b. Treaty of Versailles |
||
|
c. Treaty Brest-Litovsk |
||
|
d. Treaty of Verdun |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. Competition in world markets |
||
|
b. The Boer War |
||
|
c. Germany’s refusal to establish a formal alliance with Britain |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. everything is nonsense |
||
|
b. everything is chaos |
||
|
c. the mind is disorder |
||
|
d. only art and literature can save mankind |
|
a. Alsace |
||
|
b. Lorraine |
||
|
c. Ruhr Valley |
||
|
d. Both A and B |
||
|
e. Both B and C |
|
a. Surrealism |
||
|
b. Dadaism |
||
|
c. Victorianism |
||
|
d. Modernism |
||
|
e. Cubism |
|
a. The Weimar Republic |
||
|
b. The Reichstag |
||
|
c. The Bundestag |
||
|
d. The Bundesrat |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. Dadaism |
||
|
b. Surrealism |
||
|
c. Modernism |
||
|
d. Cubism |
|
a. The Russian Revolution |
||
|
b. German resentment of the Treaty of Versailles |
||
|
c. America's refusal to ratify the Treaty of Versailles |
||
|
d. A crisis of the international economy |
||
|
e. All of the above |
|
a. Kellogg-Briand Pact |
||
|
b. The League of Nations |
||
|
c. Dawes Plan |
||
|
d. The Treaty of Versailles |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. James Joyce |
||
|
b. T.S. Eliot |
||
|
c. D.H. Lawrence |
||
|
d. Ezra Pound |
||
|
e. George Eliot |
|
a. Gropius |
||
|
b. Mies van der Rohe |
||
|
c. Paul Klee |
||
|
d. Vassily Kandinsky |
||
|
e. Guillaume Apollinaire |
|
a. Freud |
||
|
b. Nietzsche |
||
|
c. Valéry |
||
|
d. Camus |
||
|
e. Sartre |
|
a. Belgium |
||
|
b. France |
||
|
c. Poland |
||
|
d. Luxembourg |
||
|
e. Denmark |
|
a. Fascist labor unions |
||
|
b. Fixed elections |
||
|
c. Anti-Catholicism |
||
|
d. Abolition of freedom of the press |
||
|
e. Inequality of the sexes |
|
a. Slavs were considered sub-human. |
||
|
b. The French were considered to be an inferior Latin people. |
||
|
c. Jews were to be exterminated en masse. |
||
|
d. Russians were considered equal to Nordic peoples. |
||
|
e. Polish workers were to be forced to toil in work camps. |
|
a. Poland |
||
|
b. Czechoslovakia |
||
|
c. France |
||
|
d. Estonia |
||
|
e. Belgium |
|
a. Preserve the status quo |
||
|
b. Limit the size of nation-states |
||
|
c. Initiate rapid social progress |
||
|
d. Start wars with rival powers |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. The monarchy |
||
|
b. The Fascist government |
||
|
c. The Anarchist government |
||
|
d. The Republican government |
||
|
e. The Communist government |
|
a. Aryans were a superior race. |
||
|
b. Slavs and Jews were inferior races. |
||
|
c. The German people needed a Führer. |
||
|
d. The German people needed "Lebensraum." |
||
|
e. All of the above |
|
a. Unprecedented control over the masses |
||
|
b. Rejection of parliamentary rule |
||
|
c. Anti-expansionism |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. Spain |
||
|
b. Greece |
||
|
c. Portugal |
||
|
d. Germany |
||
|
e. Italy |
|
a. George Bernard Shaw |
||
|
b. Oswald Spengler |
||
|
c. D.H. Lawrence |
||
|
d. Evelyn Waugh |
||
|
e. All of the above |
|
a. Industry increase by 250 percent |
||
|
b. Agricultural production increase by 150 percent |
||
|
c. Peasants surrender private lands |
||
|
d. Peasants join collective farms |
||
|
e. All of the above |
|
a. The Nazi Party |
||
|
b. The National Socialist Party |
||
|
c. The Utopian Socialist Party |
||
|
d. The Communist Party |
||
|
e. The Marxist Party |
|
a. De-Stalinization |
||
|
b. Increased emphasis on industry |
||
|
c. Relaxed control over workers |
||
|
d. Increased emphasis on consumer goods |
||
|
e. "Peaceful coexistence" with capitalism |
|
a. The Marshall Plan. |
||
|
b. The Truman Doctrine. |
||
|
c. The Common Market. |
||
|
d. The re-establishment of republics. |
|
a. Collectivized agriculture |
||
|
b. Nationalization of industry |
||
|
c. Two-party Communist states |
||
|
d. A and B only |
||
|
e. B and C only |
|
a. The Marshall Plan |
||
|
b. The Five Year Plan |
||
|
c. The Warsaw Pact |
||
|
d. The Nazi-Soviet Pact |
|
a. The Cold War |
||
|
b. Neocolonialism |
||
|
c. Decolonization |
||
|
d. Both A and B |
||
|
e. Both B and C |
|
a. The Brezhnev Doctrine |
||
|
b. The Helsinki Accords |
||
|
c. The Nassau Agreement |
||
|
d. The Alvor Agreement |
||
|
e. The Wanfried Agreement |
|
a. Poland |
||
|
b. Hungary |
||
|
c. Czechoslovakia |
||
|
d. Romania |
||
|
e. Yugoslavia |
|
a. Poland |
||
|
b. Romania |
||
|
c. Bulgaria |
||
|
d. Yugoslavia |
||
|
e. Czechoslovakia |
|
a. Perestroika |
||
|
b. Glasnost |
||
|
c. Abolition of price controls |
||
|
d. Both A and B |
||
|
e. Both B and C |
|
a. Stalin |
||
|
b. Lenin |
||
|
c. Khrushchev |
||
|
d. Brezhnev |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. United States |
||
|
b. France |
||
|
c. West Germany |
||
|
d. Britain |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. Scandinavia |
||
|
b. Germany |
||
|
c. Eastern Europe |
||
|
d. The Suez Canal |
||
|
e. None of the above |
|
a. It eliminated currency exchange fees from the costs of doing business between European states. |
||
|
b. It encouraged price competition among companies. |
||
|
c. It encouraged more investment in the European Union by foreign investors. |
||
|
d. A and C only. |
||
|
e. A, B, and C. |
|
a. The Maastricht Treaty |
||
|
b. The Amsterdam Treaty |
||
|
c. The Schengen Treaty |
||
|
d. The Brussels Treaty |
||
|
e. The Paris Treaty |
|
a. France |
||
|
b. Germany |
||
|
c. Britain |
||
|
d. The Netherlands |
||
|
e. Luxembourg |