General Knowledge Terms Updated

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Leonardo da Vinci

"Renaissance man" who became famous as a painter, architect, inventor, and engineer; painter of the "Mona Lisa" and "The Last Supper"

pseudopod

"false foot"; projection of cytoplasm used for movement and feeding in protists like the amoeba

sansculottes

"without knee breeches"; a nickname for workers of the Third Estate

∫1/(a^2+x^2)dx=

(1/a)(tan⁻¹(x/a)+C

First Crusade

(1096 to 1099) This crusade was launched by Pope Urban II and is considered the only successful crusade because they recaptured Jerusalem and the Holy Land from the Muslim Turks.

∫a^xdx=

(a^x)/lna+C

d/dx[cos⁻¹x]=

-1/√(1-x^2)

d/dx[cscx]=

-cscxcotx

d/dx[cotx]=

-csc²x

Hand

...

cos(3π/2)

0

cos(π/2)

0

sin(2π)

0

sin(π)

0

cos(2π)

1

sin(π/2)

1

360 Degrees

1 Full circle

Custon Made

1 item at a time, slow, handcrafted, product can be unique, expensive, skilled workers, workers produce the product start to finish.

steps of the engineering/design process

1) Identify the need or problem 2) Research the problem 3) Develop possible solutions 4) Select the best possible solution(s) 5) Construct a prototype 6) Test and evaluate 7) Communicate the solution(s) 8) Redesign

Trig Identity: cos(2x)=

1-2sin²x = 2cos²x-1

Function

1. A relationship from one set (called the domain) to another set (called the range) that assigns to each element of the domain exactly one element of the range.

d/dx[tan⁻¹x]=

1/(1+x^2)

cos(5π/3)

1/2

cos(π/3)

1/2

sin(5π/6)

1/2

sin(π/6)

1/2

d/dx[sin⁻¹x]=

1/√(1-x^2)

Googol

10 to the hundredth power, or 1 followed by 100 zeros.

Hendecagon

11 sided shape

New Economic Policy

1921 plan that permitted some capitalist activity in Russia in order to increase food production

Day

23 hrs, 56 mins, and 5 secs We round this to 24 hrs, which is what everyone says

Tilt

23.5 ° - The angle at which Earth is tilted on its axis

Earth day length (a complete rotation)

24 hours

Cosmic Year

250 million years. This is how long it takes for the solar system to orbit the center of the milky way galaxy

Length of moon's rotation

27.3 days

Length of moon's phases

29.5 days

Trig Identity: sin(2x)=

2sinxcosx

Earth year length (a complete revolution)

365 days

Common Year

365 years

Leap Year

366 days. Every four years, there is a leap year. This is caused due to and extra 6 hours added to a common year. Since 1 day is 24hrs and 6 x 4 = 24, every 4 years an extra day is added to the calendar. February 29 is that extra day

structure of a sterol

4 fused rings

Photosynthesis Equation

6 CO2 + 6 H2O + light --> C6H12O6 + 6 O2

Week

7 days There are 4-5 weeks in a month 1 year is about 52 wks

Polygon

A 2-D shape with closed sides

Cube

A 3 dimensional shape with 12 edges, 6 faces, and 8 vertices

Hammurabi

A Babylonian ruler who reigned from 1792 B.C. to 1750 B.C.and created some of the first codes of law ever developed.

Lombards

A Germanic people who invaded northern Italy in the 6th century and later parts of western Gaul(France). When they attacked Rome they were defeated by Charlemagne who was then crowned Emperor as thanks for his service.

Eratosthenes

A Greek mathematician and astronomer who estimated the circumference of the earth and the distances to the moon and sun (276-194 BC)

Socrates

A Greek philosopher who believed in an absolute right or wrong. He encouraged his students to question themselves and their beliefs, which would later lead to his being arested and forced to drink poisonous Hemlock.

Zeno

A Greek philosopher who founded a school of philosophy called Stoicism that believed in a divine power that ruled the universe. He thought that people should live a virtuous life in harmony with natural law, promoted social unity.

Dorian

A Greek-speaking people that, according to tradition, migrated into mainland Greece after the destruction of the Mycenaean civilization around 1200 B.C. Under the Dorian rule the economy collapsed and the people lost the art of writing.

Archimedes

A Hellenistic mathmatician and physicist who was the first to correctly estimate the value of pi. He also explained the law of the lever, invented simple machines such as the screw and pulley.

Brahma

A Hindu god considered the creator of the world.

Vishnu

A Hindu god considered the preserver of the world.

Hittites

A Indo-European people group who lived in Anatolia, modern day Turkey, around 2000 B.C. They were skilled iron workers, and made advanced weapons that helped them forge an empire that would reach into Mesopotamia.

Greeks

A Mediterranean people who were divided into warring city-states. Their culture was greatly influence by the Minoans, and Phoenician people.

Babylon

A Mesopotamian city-state which became a mighty empire under the leadership of Hammurabi.

Culture

A People's unique way of life.

Tacitus

A Roman historian who presented the facts accurately. He wrote about the good and the bad of imperial Rome in his Annals and Histories.

Hundred Years' War

A Series of campaigns over control of the throne of France, involving English and French royal families. This war lasted from 1337 to 1453 and changed forever the the style of Warfare in Europe.

Battle of Chaeronea

A battle in which Philip II of Macedon defeated the Athenians and Thebans (338 BC) ending Greek independence.

Julius Caesar

A brilliant, Roman, military leader who conquered Gaul (modern day France) between 58 and 50 B.C. He then returned to Rome as a hero and was declared dictator for life in 44 B.C. That same year he was assassinated by a group of senators who were afraid Caesar might become a king.

Hannibal

A brilliant, young, Carthaginian general who attacked Rome during the second Punic War. He famously marched an army of men and elephants across the Alps in an attempt to capture the city of Rome, and avenge the earlier defeat of Carthage. His attempt was unsuccessful and he was later defeated by the Romans at Zama in 202 B.C.

Cancer

A broad group of diseases involving uncontrolled cell growth

scavenger

A carnivore that feeds on the bodies of dead organisms

Shanidar Cave

A cave found in Eastern Iraq, in which it is believed a funeral was held 60,000 years ago by a group of Neanderthals. This leads scientists to believe that Neanderthals had a concept of an after life.

denature

A change in the shape of a protein (such as an enzyme) that can be caused by changes in temperature or pH (among other things).

physical change

A change of matter from one form to another without a change in chemical properties

chemical change

A change that occurs when one or more substances change into entirely new substances with different properties

Inquistion

A church court set up to try people accused of heresy.

Alexandria

A city on the Mediterranean coast of Egypt, founded by Alexander the Great, which became the center of the Hellenistic culture. It contained the famous Library and the Museum and was a center of commerce and trade.

symbiosis

A close relationship between two organisms that benefits at least one of the species

Mixture

A combination of two or more substances that are not chemically combined

mixture

A combination of two or more substances that are not chemically combined

Civilization

A complex culture with five characteristics; 1) Advanced Cities, 2) Specialized Workers, 3) Complex Institutions, 4) Record Keeping, and 5) Advanced Technology.

Nucleic acids

A complex organic substance present in living cells For ex: DNA and RNA

Concordat of Worms

A compromise between the king and the Pope that stated that the church alone could grant a church position, but the King would have the right to veto the possition.

omnivore

A consumer that eats both plants and meats

Fertile Crescent

A crescent shaped area of fertile land that encompasses Mesopotamia, and land next to the Mediterranean Sea down to Egypt and the Nile River valley.

Bohr Model

A diagram showing the location of protons, neutrons, and electrons in an atom

Free Body Diagram

A diagram that shows the forces on an object

Surgeon

A doctor that does surgery

Steppes

A dry grassland that is found north of the Caucasus Mountains, between the Black and Caspian Seas. The land is useful for raising herds and grazing flocks.

The Song of Roland

A famous medieval epic poem that praises a band of French soldiers who perished in battle during Charlemagne's reign.

Bose-Einstein Condensate

A fifth state of matter, the total opposite of gas and plasma.

Applied Force

A force on an object from a person or other object

constructive force

A force that builds UP mountains and landmasses

destructive force

A force that destroys land

Compression

A force that shortens or squeezes something, decreasing its volume (opposite of tension)

Tension

A force that stretches something (opposite of compression)

Allele

A form of a gene

Mosaic

A form of art consisting of a design made of small pieces of colored stone or glass.

Monarchy

A form of government in which a king or queen rule, usually with absolute power, and then pass the power down to their children.

Direct Democracy

A form of government in which citizens rule directly and not through representatives.

Democracy

A form of government in which the supreme authority rests with the people.

Confucianism

A form of philosophical thought that was founded by the Chinese scholar Confucius. This philosophy centered on relationships, especially those in the family, and taught the importance of filial piety, and respect for ancestors.

Improper Fraction

A fraction in which the numerator is bigger than the denominator

Prototype

A full size, working model

Centralized Government

A government in which a central authority controls the running of a state.

Aristocracy

A government in which power is in the hands of the nobility, or wealthy, landowning families.

Monarchy

A government ruled by a king or queen.

biome

A group of ecosystems with similar climates and organisms

System

A group of interacting, interrelated, or interdependent elements or parts that function together as a whole to accomplish a goal

population

A group of organisms of the same species in a given area

Bishop

A high-ranking priest, or Church official with authority over a local area, or diocese.

Nomad

A highly mobile people group who move from place to place foraging, or searching, for new sources of food.

Heart

A hollow, muscular organ that pumps blood throughout the body.

Crusade

A holy war. Specifically a number of wars in which medieval Christian warriors sought to recover control of the Holy land from the Muslims.

Chord

A horizontal line across a circle. The biggest chord possible is the diameter.

Glacier

A huge mass of ice slowly flowing over a land mass

Artifact

A human made object, such as tools and Jewlery.

Leakey's

A husband and wife team of Anthropologists who made many of the greatest discoveries about early man.

Insectivore

A insect-eating animal

Manor

A large estate, often including farms and a village, ruled by a lord.

Great Wall of China

A large wall created by Shi Huangdi to connect preexisting defensive walls, along the northern border of China. Built to protect his empire from northern invaders, Shi Huangdi used thousands of forced laborers to build this wall.

Dinosaur

A large, prehistoric reptile

Epidermis

A layer of skin right under exposed skin layer

Aryans

A light skinned, tall, semi-nomadic group of herders who originated in the mountains between the Caspian and Aral seas. Around 1000 B.C. they invaded and conquered the Indus Valley creating their own kingdom.

Constraint

A limit to the design process. Constraints may be such things as appearance, funding, space materials, and human capabilities.

active volcano

A live volcano; shows signs of erupting in the future

Deoxyribonucleic Acid

A long linear polymer found in the nucleus of a cell and shaped like a double helix

Epic

A long poem that tells about legendary or heroic deeds.

Institution

A long-lasting pattern of organization in a community such as government, and religion.

Knight

A man who received honor and land in exchange for serving a lord as a soldier. These were well trained soldiers who fought on horseback for their chosen lord.

Custom production

A manufacturing system that involves producing a limited quantity of a product to a customer's specifications.

Contour Map

A map that shows elevation, natural features, man-made features

Conductor

A material that heat and electricity can pass through

Insulator

A material that heat and electricity cannot pass through

Algebra

A mathematical phrase involving at least one variable and sometimes numbers and operation symbols.

Temperature

A measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in an object

sonar

A measuring instrument that helps map the ocean floor

Troubadour

A medieval poet and musician who traveled from place to place, entertaining people.

Einhard

A medival monk and secretary of Charlemagne who wrote his biography.

Lattice

A method of doing multiplication with using a rectangle/square

Assyria

A militaristic people who forged an empire by conquering Mesopotamia, Egypt, and many other lands, around 850 B.C.

Liu Bang

A military leader who founded the Han dynasty in 202 B.C. He did away with the legalistic policies of the Qin dynasty and brought peace and stability to China.

Heterogeneous mixture

A mixture in which all components are visible

Homogeneous mixture

A mixture in which one substance is evenly distributed, and cannot be seen through naked eye.

Homogeneous Mixture

A mixture that is evenly mixed

Heterogeneous Mixture

A mixture that is not evenly mixed

Equation

A name for a complex number sentence.

Buddha

A name meaning the "enlightened one", used for Siddhartha Gautama, who started the religion of Buddhism.

Themopylae

A narrow mountain pass where 300 Spartan soldiers held off the Persian army so that the rest of the Greek soldiers could escape. The Persian army eventually broke through with the help of a traitor who showed them a way around the pass.

electron

A negatively charged particle in the atom's nucleus

Divisor

A no. in a division problem which divides the dividend

Coefficient

A number in front of a variable

Persian Wars

A number of conflicts between Greek city-states and the Persian Empire, ranging from the Ionian Revolt (499-494 B.C.E.) through Darius's punitive expedition that failed at Marathon. Chronicled by Herodotus.

Square Number

A number that is the product of two of the same factors.

Mixed Number

A number with a integral and a fractional part

neutron

A particle in an atom's nucleus with no charge

Chromosome

A particle that holds tightly coiled DNA

Serf

A peasant laborer who was bound by law to the lands of a noble. He was different from a slave in that he could not be bought or sold but in everyother way was owned by his feudal lord.

Etruscans

A people group, native to Italy, that ruled Rome for more than 100 years. Skilled metal workers they built up Rome and became a leading influence in the Roman culture.

Thousands Period

A period of 3 place values which are thousands place, ten thousands place, and hundred thousands place

Ones Period

A period of 3 place values: Hundreds place, tens place, and ones place.

Great Schism

A period of division in the Roman Catholic Church, 1378-1417, over who should be the pope. During this time there were two, or sometimes even three people claiming to be the true Pope.

Pax Romana

A period of peace and prosperity throughout the Roman Empire, lasting from 27 B.C. to A.D. 180.

Billions Period

A period of the place values billions place, ten billions, place, and hundred billions place

Millions Period

A period of three place values which are the millions place, ten millions place, and hundred millions place

Neolithic Age

A period of time, also known as the New Stone Age, that began around 8000 B.C. and lasted until around 3000 B.C. People during this time learned to polish stone tools, make pottery, grow crops, and raise animals.

Paleolithic Age

A period of time, also known as the Old Stone Age, that lasted from about 2.5 million yr. to 8000 B.C.

Triassic Period

A period when Dinosaurs first evolved.

Jurassic Period

A period when enormous, herbivorous Dinosaurs began to develop

Cretaceous Period

A period when more carnivorous, ferocious Dinosaurs evolved

Vassal

A person granted land from a lord in return for loyalty and service.

Epicurean

A person who follows the ideas of Epicurus in being devoted to refined sensuous enjoyment (especially good food and drink).

Engineer

A person who is trained in and uses technological and scientific knowledge to solve practical problems.

Stoicism

A philosophy founded by Zeno, in Hellenistic Athens that taught that happiness came not from following emotions, but from following reason and doing one's duty. It taught that people should live virtuous lives in line with the laws of the gods, and natural laws.

Legalism

A philosophy, started in China by Hanfeizi, and Li Si, in which a powerful government should be used to keep control. They believed in rewards for good behavior and punishments for bad behavior, but that punishments should be used more often than rewards.

Melanin

A pigment that our skin produces

Ones Place

A place that has 1 digits

Billions Place

A place that has 10 digits

Ten Billions Place

A place that has 11 digits

Hundred Billions Place

A place that has 12 digits

Trillions Place

A place that has 13 digits

Ten Trillions Place

A place that has 14 digits

Hundred Trillions Place

A place that has 15 digits

Quadrillions Place

A place that has 16 digits

Ten Quadrillions Place

A place that has 17 digits

Hundred Quadrillions Place

A place that has 18 digits

Quintillions Place

A place that has 19 digits

Tens Place

A place that has 2 digits

Ten Quintillions Place

A place that has 20 digits

Hundred Quintillions Place

A place that has 21 digits

Sextillions Place

A place that has 22 digits

Ten Sextillions Place

A place that has 23 digits

Hundred Sextillions Place

A place that has 24 digits

Septillions Place

A place that has 25 digits

Ten Septillions Place

A place that has 26 digits

Hundred Septillions Place

A place that has 27 digits

Octillions Place

A place that has 28 digits

Ten Octillions Place

A place that has 29 digits

Hundreds Place

A place that has 3 digits

Hundred Octillions Place

A place that has 30 digits

Nonillions Place

A place that has 31 digits

Ten Nonillions Place

A place that has 32 digits

Hundred Nonillions Place

A place that has 33 digits

Decillions Place

A place that has 34 digits

Thousands Place

A place that has 4 digits

Ten Thousands Place

A place that has 5 digits

Hundred Thousands Place

A place that has 6 digits

Millions Place

A place that has 7 digits

Ten Millions Place

A place that has 8 digits

Hundred Millions Place

A place that has 9 digits

Storage

A place where a communication is stored. EX: DVD, CD, ipod, video game, DVR, Answering machine

Monastery

A place where communities of monks live lives of devotion to God in isolation from the outside world.

Kalidasa

A poet and playwrighter who was a writer at the court of Chandra Gupta II. His most famous work is called "Shakuntala".

Thermal Equilibrium

A point at which two objects reach the same temperature

Holy Roman Empire

A political entity in Europe that began with the papal coronation of Otto I as the first emperor in 962. It was a weak political association of independent states in Germany and Italy.

Feudalism

A political stystem in which a ruler would give parts of his kingdom to trusted nobles in return for loyalty and military service.

Feudalism

A political system in which nobles are granted the use of lands that legally belong to their king, in exchange for their loyalty, military service, and protection of the people who live on the land.

Tyre

A popular trading port, this Phoenician city-state was known for its trade in a valuable purple dye.

proton

A positively charged particle in the nucleus of an atom

Eleanor of Aquitaine

A powerful French duchess she divorced the king of France and then married Henry II of England. Together they ruled all of England and about 1/2 of France. She was the mother of King Richard the Lion-Hearted, and King John.

Chemical Weathering

A process by which rock is broken down through change in its chemical composition

Scientific Method

A process by which scientists perform an experiment, test a hypothesis, or prove a statement.

Engineering Design Process

A process used to design and build solutions to problems

Characteristic Property

A property that does not depend on the amount of a material

element

A pure substance made of only one kind of atom

Triangular Pyramid

A pyramid in which all 4 faces are triangles and has 1 vertex

Square

A quadraliteral with all 4 sides being the same and 4 right angles

Vector

A quantity that shows magnitude and direction

mutualism

A relationship in which both organisms benefit

parasitism

A relationship in which one organism benefits and the other is harmed, but not killed

Hinduism

A religion and philosophy developed in ancient India, characterized by a belief in reincarnation and a number of gods.

Jainism

A religion that was founded by Mahavira, in the 6th c. B.C., that believes that every living thing has a soul and thus should not be harmed.

Subduction

A result of a convergent plate boundary in which the more dense plate (oceanic) slides under the less dense plate (continental).

Royal Road

A road that ran 1,677 miles connecting Susa, in Persia, with Sardis, in Anatolia. It had way stations every 15 miles to make it faster for royal messengers to travel the distance.

Sketch

A rough drawing that represents the main features of an object or scene and often made as a preliminary study.

Absolute Ruler

A ruler who has unlimited power and controls all aspects of society.

Doctor

A scientist who checks our health, and our body

Archaeologist

A scientist who studies ancient artifacts

Paleoentologist

A scientist who studies prehistoric animals such as dinos, mammoths, trilobites, and etc.

geologist

A scientist who studies the forces that make and shape Earth

Theravada

A sect of Buddhism focusing on the strict spiritual discipline originally advocated by the Buddha.

Mahayana

A sect of Buddhism that offers salvation to all and allows popular workship.

Punic Wars

A series of three wars between Rome and Carthage (264-146 B.C.); resulted in the destruction of Carthage and Rome's dominance over the western Mediterranean.

metabolism

A set of chemical reactions through which an organism builds up or breaks down materials as it carries out its life processes

Bi-Halve

A shell that is symmetrical, or can be split into two

dormant volcano

A sleeping, inactive volcano

Brain

A small, round Organ located under the skull. This body organ controls every part and system of your body. If you lose it, end of your life.

Mercenary

A soldier who works for a foreign government in exchange for money.

Karma

A sort of record kept of all the good or bad things that a person has done in their life, which then affects them when they are reincarnated into their next life.

Solid

A state of matter in which matter has a definite shape and volume

Gas

A state of matter in which matter takes the shape and volume of the container

Liquid

A state of matter in which matter takes the shape of the container and has a definite volume

Line

A straight line which has no endpoints

Variable

A symbol used to represent a quantity that can change

Silk Roads

A system of ancient caravan routes across Central Asia, along which traders carried silk and other trade goods.

Oligarchy

A system of government in which a small group of people holds power.

Open System

A system that is not contained, matter and energy can be exchanged with its surroundings

Closed System

A system that is sealed so that it cannot exchange matter or energy with its surroundings

Design Process

A systematic problem solving strategy, with criteria and constraints, used to develop many possible solutions to solve a problem or satisfy human needs and wants and to winnow (narrow) down the possible solutions to one final choice.

Periodic Table

A table that organizes all of the elements by atomic number; shows trends

Divergent Plate Boundary

A tectonic plate boundary in which two plates come apart.

Transform Plate Boundary

A tectonic plate boundary in which two plates slide past each other.

Convergent Plate Boundary

A tectonic plate boundary in which two tectonic plates come together.

Trojan War

A ten year war, between the Mycenaean Greeks and the city-state of Troy, in Anatolia. In the myth the war was caused when a Tojan Prince kidnapped Helen, the wife of a Greek King.

Homo Habilis

A term meaning 'Man of Skill'. Remains of these people were found in Oldavai Gorge, in Tanzania, by Louis and Mary Leakey.

atomic theory

A theory stating that all matter is composed of atoms

Square Pyramid

A three dimensional shape with a square base, 4 triangular faces, and one vertex at the top

Nubia

A thriving kingdom, also known as Kush, which was located in the southern part of Egypt, along the Nile River. It was a very prosperous kingdom, known for its rich trade network. Its culture was greatly influence by the Egyptians, as they sometimes were ruled by them.

Ziggurat

A tiered, pyramid shaped temple, used as a place of religious worship. The word means "Mountain of God".

Shi Huangdi

A title that was adopted by the emperor of Qin, in 221 B.C., which meant 'First Emperor'. As emperor, Shi Huangdi, ruled with absolute authority, violetly quelling all internal struggles. He expanded his empire through conquest, wishing to unify all of China under his rule.

Force Meter

A tool used to measure the force on an object

Scalene Triangle

A triangle in which NO side is the same

Acute triangle

A triangle in which all angles are acute angles

Right triangle

A triangle in which at least one angle is a right angle

Equilateral Triangle

A triangle in which every single side is the SAME

Isosceles Triangle

A triangle in which two sides are the same, while the other side is different

Obtuse Triangle

A triangle with at least one obtuse angle

Gothic Style

A type of European architecture that developed in the Middle Ages, that created large buildings that focused on light and beauty. They were characterized by flying buttresses, ribbed vaulting, thin walls, high roofs, and stained glass windows.

Comedy

A type of drama writen by the ancient Greeks in which respected people and ideas are made rediculous through crude humor and slap stick.

Bas Relief

A type of sculpture in which forms are raised slightly from the background, creating a 3D affect.

Solution

A uniform mixture where the individual particles are dissolved in one another and cannot be seen.

Constant

A value that does not change

Independent Variable

A variable that is changed by the experimenter

Dependent Variable

A variable that is measured; changes as a result of what the experimenter changes

Antarctica

A very cold continent at the south pole of earth. It is also biggest desert in the world.

Skull

A very strong bone which keeps everything inside your head safe, except, the skin and hair.

Civil War

A war between people in the same country.

Peloponnesian War

A war, lasting from 431 to 404 B.C., in which Athens and its allies were eventually defeated by Sparta and its allies.

Barter

A way of trading goods and services without using money.

Buddhism

A world religion or philosophy based on the teaching of the Buddha and holding that a state of enlightenment can be attained by suppressing worldly desire.

Page

A young boy, usually around the age of 7, who was sent to a castle to learn courtly manners and begin his training to become a knight.

Base Pair Rule

A(adenine) =T (thymine) and C (cytosine) = G (guanine)

Limiting factor

Abiotic factor that limits population growth

four bases of DNA

Adenine, Cytosine, Thymine, Guanine

four bases of RNA

Adenine, Cytosine, URACIL, Guanine

Olaudah Equiano

African who wrote about the horrific conditions Africans endured on Middle Passages voyages

Hyksos

After a series of weak pharaohs Egypt was invaded and conquered by this Asiatic people. They ruled Egypt from about 1640 to 1570 B.C. until they were ousted once more by the Egyptians, who then set up the New Kingdom.

Judah

After the death of King Solomon the Kingdom of Israel broke into two separate kingdoms in 922 B.C. The Southern Kingdom was called Judah, after the tribe of Judah, from which the Hebrew people became known as 'Jews'.

Endoplasmic Reticulum

Aka ER, this is where the cells's chemicals remain and where proteins are made

Dodecagon Angles

All angles ad up to 1800 degrees

Octagon Angles

All angles add up to 1080 degrees

Nonagon Angles

All angles add up to 1260 degrees

Decagon Angles

All angles add up to 1440 degrees

Hendecagon Angles

All angles add up to 1620 degrees

Triangle Angles

All angles add up to 180 degrees

Quadrilateral Angles

All angles add up to 360 degrees

Pentagon Angles

All angles add up to 540 degrees

Hexagon Angles

All angles add up to 720 degrees

Heptagon Angles

All angles add up to 900 degrees

50 Divisibility Rule

All digits excluding the zero have to be divisible by 5

3 Divisibility Rule

All digits of a # have to add up to a 3,6, or 9. If the sum of the digits turn out to be a 2-digit #, add the 2 digit #'s digits again. And repeat that if it again turns out to be a double digit #.

Positive Number

All numbers (whole, fractions, and decimals) that are above zero (Like 1,2,3,456,897,765498399, and etc.)

Integer

All numbers that are negative, positive, non-fractional, and non-decimal

Whole Number

All positive, non-decimal, non-fractional integers

9 Divisibility Rule

All the digits should add up to 9 eventually.

Gallipoli Campaign

Allied effort to destroy the Central Powers' guns and forts that lined the Dardanelles

Scholastics

Also called Schoolmen, these men were scholars who gathered at medieval European universities to learn and debate.

Chang Jiang River

Also called the 'Yangtze River', it flows from the Western mountians down to the Yellow Sea, and is one of the two main river of China.

Bubonic Plague

Also called the Black Death, this was a deadly disease that spread throughout Europe and killed one out of every three people, in the 1300's.

Vikings

Also known as "Norsemen" or "Northmen" these German and Scandinavian peoples raided Europe from the 700's through the 1100's.

Anatolia

Also known as Asia Minor, or the country of Turkey, it is a large peninsula that juts out into the Mediterranean Sea. The land is mostly made up of high, rocky plateaus which provide an abundant supply of timber and minerals.

Charles Martel

Also known as Charles the Hammer. The Carolingian monarch of the Franks who was responsible for defeating Muslims at the battle of Tours in 732, which ended the Muslim threat to western Europe.

Greco-Roman Culture

Also known as Classical Civilization, this is the mixing together of Geek, Roman, and Hellenistic cultures.

Classical Civilization

Also known as Greco-Roman culture, this is a combination of Greek, Roman, and Hellenistic cultures. The ideas from all these cultures were incorporated into Roman art and literature.

Philip II of France

Also known as Philip Augustus, he was the Capetian king who increased the territory of France, and wanted to form a stronger central government. He was the most powerful of the Capetian Kings and was willing to do anything to get what he wanted.

Tithe

Also known as a Church tax, this was a tenth of a family's income given to the church.

Polis

Also known as a city-state, this was a political unit that was made up of a city and its surrounding area.

Huang He River

Also known as the "Yellow River", because of the its color, it is the main river of China, found in the North of the country. Because of its history of disastrous floods it is sometimes called "China's Sorrow".

Wudi

Also known as the 'Martial Emperor' because he expanded the Han empire through war. He was the longest ever ruling emperor of the Han dynasty. He ruled from 141 B.C.to 87 B.C.

Neolithic Revolution

Also known as the Agricultural Revolution, when people went from hunting and gathering for their food to farming.

Kush

Also known as the Kingdom of Nubia, it was a prosperous trading power in the southern part of Egypt.

Cytoplasm

Also known as the protoplasm, this is the main liquid inside the cell, outside the nucleus

the cause of moon phases

Amount of reflected light from sun and position of the Earth

Hittites

An Indo-European people who lived in Anatolia, or modern day Turkey, around 2000 B.C. They created an empire that would span all the way into Mesopotamia with the help of their advanced Iron weapons.

Benedict

An Italian monk who lived from 480-547 and founded the Benedictine order. He wrote a set of rules to be followed in order to live a holy life.

Homer

An ancient Greek epic poet, who is believed to have written the Iliad ,and the Odyssey around 850 B.C.

Yin and Yang

An ancient belief that the natural order of the world is held in harmony with the two halves of Yin (cold, dark, soft, and mysterious things) and Yang (warm, bright, hard, and clear things) balancing each other out.

Phalanx

An ancient military formation of foot soldiers armed with spears and shields, grouped closely together. One of the most powerful battle tactics of the ancient world.

Chaldeans

An ancient people who lived in southern Babylon, along the Persian Gulf. After defeating the Assyrians they took over the area and founded an empire with Babylon as its capital.

Minoans

An ancient, seafaring culture that was centered around the island of Crete from 2000 to 4000 B.C. An extremely advanced and rich culture, they suddenly collapsed around 1200 B.C. when the Thera volcano violently erupted distroying their civilization.

Reflex Angle

An angle that is bigger than 180 degrees but less than 360 degrees

Province

An area of the Roman Empire ruled by a governor, who was supported by an army.

Cleisthenes

An aristocrat, and Athenian leader who created a council of 500 and helped form Athenian democracy. He also broke up the power of the nobility by dividing the population into ten groups based on location instead of wealth.

Xiang Yu

An aristocratic general who was willing to allow the warlords to keep their territories if they would acknowledge him as their feudal lord. He was beaten in battle by Liu Bang, in 202 B.C.

Number

An arithmetical value, expressed by a word, symbol, or figure, representing a particular quantity and used in counting and making calculations and for showing order in a series or for identification.

Ion

An atom with a positive or negative charge

Inference

An educated guess using observation data to make a conclusion.

Carbohydrate

An energy rich compound such as sugar

Lipid

An energy rich organic compound like fat

cell theory

An idea that all living things are composed of cells, cells are the basic units of structure and function in living things, and new cells are produced from existing cells

Shiva

An important Hindu deity who in the trinity of gods was the Destroyer.

organism

An individual living thing

Organism

An individual self-sustaining unit of life or living material. Five forms of organisms: plants, animals, fungi, protists, and bacteria

microscope

An instrument that makes small objects look larger

seismograph

An instrument that measures the ground movement during an earthquake

predation

An interaction in which one organism kills and eats another

Newton's First Law

An object at rest stays at rest until acted on by a net force and an object in motion stays in motion until acted on by a net force.

Addition

An operation in which we combine two numbers to make a larger one.

Division

An operation in which we make parts out of a number, which are equal

Subtraction

An operation in which we take away 1 number from another to get a smaller number

Multiplication

An operation used for the shortening of repeated addition

producer

An organism that makes its own food

Heterozygous

An organism with two diffrent alleles for a trait.

niche

An organism's role, or job, in its habitat

Phenotype

An organisms physical apperance

Guild

An organization of people in the same craft or trade, who worked together to improve the economic or social conditions of its members.

Lift

An upward force on an object (such as a wing) that opposes the downward pull of gravity

Northmen

Another name for Vikings these were Germanic people who attacked and pillaged the people of Europe.

Polyhedron

Another name for a 3-D shape

Australopithecines

Any hominid that walked upright.

Negative Number

Any number that has a minus sign (-) and is smaller than zero

Trapezoid

Any quadrilateral that has two sides that are the same, while the other two are both different from each other

2-D Shape

Any shape that is flat

3-D Shape

Any shape that is like a model

Octagon

Any shape with eight sides

Pentagon

Any shape with five sides

Quadrilateral

Any shape with four sides

Nonagon

Any shape with nine sides

Heptagon

Any shape with seven sides

Hexagon

Any shape with six sides

Decagon

Any shape with ten sides

Triangle

Any shape with three sides

Matter

Anything that has mass and takes up space

matter

Anything that has mass and takes up space

the 3 factors affecting biodiversity

Area, climate, and niche diversity

Ring of Fire location

Around the Pacific Ocean's edge

Alexander the Great

As the son of Philip II, he took power after his fathers death and conquered most of the ancient world from Asia Minor to Egypt and India. This began the Hellenistic culture which was a blending of Greek, Persian, Indian, and Egyptian influences. (356 BCE-323 BCE)

f(x)=ln(x+2)

Asymptote: x=-2 Domain: (-2, ∞)

f(x)=ln(-x)

Asymptote: x=0 Domain: (-∞, 0)

f(x)= -2+lnx

Asymptote: x=0 Domain: (0, ∞)

f(x)=-lnx

Asymptote: x=0 Domain: (0, ∞)

f(x)=ln(x-2)

Asymptote: x=2 Domain: (2, ∞)

f(x) = e^(x-2)

Asymptote: y=0 Domain: (-∞, ∞)

f(x)=e^(x+2)

Asymptote: y=0 Domain: (-∞, ∞)

f(x) = e^(x) +2

Asymptote: y=2 Domain: (-∞, ∞)

Solon

Athenian reformer of the 6th century; established laws that eased the burden of debt on farmers, forbade enslavement for debt; citizens gained more power. He also split society into 4 classes based on weath, creating a higher-achy.

determining the number of neutrons

Atomic mass - Atomic number

Article

Atrikil

Prince Klemens von Metternich

Austrian prince who strongly influenced policy decision-making at the Congress of Vienna

Marie-Antoinette

Austrian wife of King Louis XVI, serving as queen during his reign

Formula for Disk Method

Axis of rotation is a boundary of the region.

Formula for Washer Method

Axis of rotation is not a boundary of the region.

Moctezuma II

Aztec emperor at the time of Cortes's conquest

Nitrogen fixation

Bacteria convert nitrogen gas to usable compounds

Conjunction

Baglayici

Cell

Basic unit of sctructure and function of living things

Support System

Battery, alternator, starter, radiator, heat, wipers, AC, radio, navigation system

Cuneiform

Believed to be the first form of writing, which was created by Sumerian scribes.

We

Biz

Somatic

Blood cells, skin cells, muscle cells ect.

Covalent Bond

Bonds formed by sharing electrons

Ionic Bond

Bonds formed by the attraction between negative and positive ions; transfer electrons

Metacarpal

Bone of the hand between the wrist and each finger

Carpal

Bones in the wrist

Supersonic

Breaking the sound barrier, or travel faster than sound

Decomposer

Breaks down dead things

Admiral Horatio Nelson

British naval commander who won the Battle of the Nile

elements found in carbohydrates

C, H and O in the ratio of 1:2:1

elements found in lipids

C, H and O with NO RATIO

elements found in proteins

C, H, O and N

elements found in nucleic acids

C, H, O, N, P and S

Benzene Chemical formula

C6H6

Vinegar (Molecular formula)

CH3COOH

Carbon Dioxide (Molecular formula)

CO2

Fredrick I "Barbarossa"

Called Barbarossa because of his red beard he was known as a powerful personality and military. He was the German king who ruled the Holy Roman Empire, being the first one to call it that, until his death in 1190.

It

Cansiz, hevan. O

Nucleus

Cells control center

Anaphase

Centromeres split

Physical Change

Change that affects one or more physical properties of a substance but does not produce a new substance

Chemical Change

Change that occurs when one or more substances are changed into entirely new substances with different properties

Physical Property

Characteristics that can be observed or measured without changing the identity of the matter.

Chemical Property

Characteristics that describe a substance based on how it changes into new substances with different properties

Structural System

Chassis, frame, body, windows, seats, dashboard, etc.

Shi Huangdi

China's "First Emperor" who used strict laws and harsh punishments (legalism) as a basis for his government. He founded the Qin Dynasty which was later replaced by the Han dynasty.

Confucius

Chinese philosopher, administrator, and moralist. His social and moral teachings, collected in the 'Analects', tried to replace former religious observances. He believed that social order, harmony and good government could be organized around 5 basic relationships.

Prophase

Chromation in the nucleus condenses to form chromosomes

Metaphase

Chromosomes line up across the center of the cell

Telophase

Chromosomes streatch out and loose rod-like apperance

Homologuous Chromosomes

Chromosomes that pair up

Canon Law

Church law. The laws governing the Roman Catholic Church.

Clavicle

Collarbone

food webs

Collection of food chains; more realistic than a food chain

Step 7 (Design Process)

Communicate the Solution(s)

Diploid Number

Complete set of chromosomes.

Organic

Compounds that do contain carbon

Inorganic

Compounds that do not contain carbon

Hypothermia

Condition when one's body temperature is very low. Happens during winter or cold season

the 7 main biome categories

Coniferous forest, deciduous forest, grassland, desert, rain forest, tundra, desert

Virgil

Considered the greatest of the Roman poets, he wrote the epic poem the Aeniad. It tells of the hero Aeneas and praises Roman virtues.

Step 5 (Design Process)

Construct a Prototype

Wegener's theory

Continental drift

Control Subsystem

Controls speed and direction of a vehicle

found in the mantle

Convection currents

the 4 layers of Earth

Crust, mantle, outer core, and inner core (center of Earth is solid)

Cytokinesis

Cytoplasm divides.

density formula

D = m / v (Density = mass divided by volume)

Cubing function

D: (-∞,+∞) R: (-∞,+∞)

Identity function

D: (-∞,+∞) R: (-∞,+∞)

Logistic function

D: (-∞,+∞) R: (0, 1)

Exponential function

D: (-∞,+∞) R: (0,+∞)

Squaring function

D: (-∞,+∞) R: (o,+∞)

Cosine function

D: (-∞,+∞) R: [-1,1]

Sine function

D: (-∞,+∞) R: [-1,1]

Absolute value function

D: (-∞,+∞) R: [0,+∞)

Reciprocal function

D: (-∞,+∞) x can't be zero R: (-∞,+∞) y can't be zero

Natural log function

D: (0,+∞) R: (-∞,+∞)

Square root function

D: (0,+∞) R: (0,+∞)

chromatin

DNA that is coiled around proteins

Tide

Daily movements of ocean water that change the level of the ocean's surface

Aqueduct

Designed by Roman engineers these artificial channels brought water, over long distances, into cities and towns.

Step 3 (Design Process)

Develop Possible Solution(s)

Machine

Device with fixed and moving parts that modifies mechanical energy in order to do work.

Osmosis

Diffusion of water molecules through a selectively permeable membrane.

Heterochromia Iridis

Disease that cause iris of an eye to have multiple colors

Heterochromia Iridium

Disease that causes eyes that are each a different color

Circumference

Distance around a circle

Wall

Divides a space into rooms

Henry Hudson

Dutch sailor who looked unsuccessfully for the Northwest Passage and explored the river that is now named after him (in New York state)

planet with the greatest density

Earth

geocentric (Ptolemy's theory)

Earth as the center

Carnivore

Eats meat (animals)

Herbivore

Eats plants

Omnivore

Eats plants and animals

Sound Energy

Energy caused by an object's vibrations

Elastic Potential Energy

Energy of shape

Light Energy

Energy produced by the vibrations of electrically charged particles

Chemical Potential Energy

Energy stored in chemical reactions

Propulsion System

Engine, axles, tires, transmission

Sir Francis Drake

English explorer and second person to circumnavigate the globe

Sir Thomas More

English humanist who wrote "Utopia", a book that told about a perfect but nonexistent society based on reason

Henry VIII

English king who broke with the Catholic Church in order to divorce his first wife

William Shakespeare

English playwright and poet; author of famous works such as "Hamlet", "Romeo and Juliet", "Macbeth", and "A Midsummer Night's Dream"

Sun Season

Every 6.25 million years, the sun changes its season. The sun has a blue, orange, purple, and green season

Pranoun

Evezlik

Diameter

Exactly the line of symmetry through a circle

Protein

Example is an enzyme - Chain of amino acids

Bioengineering Technologies

Explores the production of mechanical devices, products, biological substances and organisms to improve health and/or our daily lives

Genes

Factors that control traits

genes

Factors that control traits

limiting factors

Factors that limit the size of a population

Lipids

Fats oils and waxes - Chains of CHO

Verb

Fel

Flooring

Flat wood or concrete supported by beams on the foundation; flat surface at the bottom of rooms

Jan van Eyck

Flemish painter who focused on landscapes and everyday life

Niccolo Machiavelli

Florentine political philosopher and statesman who worte "The Prince", which advised rulers to separate morals from politics

Current

Flow of electrons/charged particles through a circuit

the 3 limiting factors in an ecosystem

Food, space, and weather conditions

Newton's Third Law

For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.

Newton's Second Law

Force equals mass times acceleration

Metamorphic Rock

Formed from another rock type going through extreme heat and pressure to change

Sedimentary Rock

Formed from small sediments compacting together through pressure

Igneous Rock

Formed from volcanic activity

Old Order

France's social and political structure that paces the king at the top and three estates below him

Charles Maurice de Talleyrand

French diplomat who attended the Congress of Vienna on behalf of King Louis XVIII and helped ensure fairness as the new map was drawn

Francis of Sales

French missionary who returned the French district of Savoy to the Catholic church and founded a religious teaching order for women

Republic

From the Latin prase meaning 'Public Affairs' this is a system of government in which officials are voted for by the people. This right was only given to free-born men, who were citizens of Rome.

Even Function

Function whose output does't change for a number and it's opposite

Odd Function

Function whose outputs change when switched from positive to negative of a number

Gravitational Potential Energy

GPE = mgh

3 causes for thickness/thinness of magma

Gas, temperature, and the amount of silica

Chromosome theory of inheritance

Genes are carried from parents to offspring on chromosomes

Genotype

Genetic makeup

Albrecht Durer

German artist who visited Italy in the late 1400's, learning techniques of realism and perspective, influencing later German Renaissance artists

Zimmerman Note

German diplomat's secret message to Mexico urging an attack on the United States

Johannes Gutenberg

German man credited with the invention of movable type in the mid-1400's

U-boats

German submarines that threatened ships in the waters around Great Britain

Consumer

Gets energy from eating other living things

Adaptive and Assistive Devices

Glasses, contact lenses, wheel chair, walker, cane, ramp, grab bars, hearing aid, insulin pump, pacemaker, prsthetic, lifts (stairs, oxygen, respirator, braces (legs), mechanical larynx

Mass Produced

Goods in which many are made at the same time and have interchangeable parts

Custom Made

Goods made individually for each person

Hipparchus

Greek astronomer and mathematician who discovered the precession of the equinoxes, and made the first known star chart, He is also believed to have been the inventor of trigonometry.

Sparta

Greek city-state that was ruled by an oligarchy, focused on military, used slaves for agriculture, and discouraged the arts.

Apostle

Greek for "one sent forth" Refers to the twelve chosen by Jesus during his public ministry as his disciples.

Hydrochloric Acid Chemical Formula

HCl

Haploid Number

Half the number of chromosomes

Pope Gregory VII

He banned Lay Investitures because he thought popes should have the power to name bishops not the kings. He excommunicated Henry IV because he spoke out against him over this issure causing a standoff that Gregory eventually won.

Philip II of Macedonia

He became the king of Macedonia, Greece, in 359 B.C. As a brilliant, yet ruthless leader he transformed his people into an army that would later conquer all of Greece. He would later be succeded by his son Alexander the Great.

Pope Leo III

He crowned Charlemagne Holy Roman Emperor on Christmas Day, 800.

Epicurus

He developed the school of though called Epicureanism in Hellenistic Athens; it held that happiness is the chief goal in life, and the means to achieve happiness was the pursuit of pleasure.

Emperor Henry IV

He fought against Pope Gregory VII over the power to choose church officials and was excommunicated. He had to beg for forgiveness for three days in the cold in order to be let back in the church.

Chandra Gupta I

He founded the Gupta Empire, and took the title "Great King of Kings" in 320 CE. He came to power when he married a daughter of an influential royal family,

First Emperor of Qin

He gave himself the title of Shi Huangdi, or First Emperor, and ruled with an absolute and ruthless hand. He quelled all internal struggles and then proceeded to expand the empire by conquering outside invaders, with the end goal of unifying China.

Gilgamesh

He is believed to have been a Babylonian King of the city-state Uruk, around 2700 B.C. Many epic tales have been written about him, making him out to be a mighty warrior.

Narmer

He is the Egyptian king who is credited with bringing about the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt into one Kingdom, around 3000 B.C. He started the first Egyptian dynasty and founded his capital at Memphis.

Louis the Pious

He was Charlemagne's only surviving son who ruled the Carolingian empire from 814-840. He was a very devout man but an inept leader who divided the empire between his 3 sons brining an end to Carolingian empire.

Octavian

He was Julius Caesar's succussor who later became known as Caesar Augustus. He was able to defeat Mark Antony to gain power over all of Rome and became Rome's first true emperor.

Confucius

He was a Chinese scholar, born in 551 B.C., who wanted to bring stability and order to the land. He believed order could be restored through 5 basic relationships; Ruler and Subject, Father and Son, Husband and Wife, Older Brother and Younger Brother, and Friend with Friend.

Jan Hus

He was a Czechoslovakian religious reformer who taught that the authority of the Bible was higher than that of the Pope. He was excommunicated from the Church in 1412, tried as a heratic, and burned at the stake in 1415.

Paul

He was a Follower, or Apostle, of Jesus who helped spread Christianity throughout the Roman world. He specifically ministered to the gentiles, or non-Jews.

Sargon

He was a great Akkadian leader who ruled from 2334 B.C. to 2279 B.C. He was able to conquer the Sumerians, and other people groups in the area in order to establish the Akkadian empire.

Nebuchadnezzar

He was a great Chaldean King who was known for his great building projects, especially in the city of Babylon. He created the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the ancient wonders of the world, and a seven tiered ziggurat.

Cyrus

He was a great Persian ruler and military genius who began a campaign of conquest from 550 to 539 B.C. He ruled his empire with a strong yet tolerant hand, respecting the customs and religions of the people he conquered.

Sennacherib

He was a particulary violent Assyrian king who ruled around 720 to 683 B.C. He claimed to have sacked many cities and killed large numbers of people.

Thomas Aquinas

He was a scholar who argued that the most basic religious truths could be proved by sound reasoning. He wrote a book called "Summa Theologicae", which combined ancient Greek thought with Christian beliefs.

Cicero

He was a senator, and famous orator of Rome. Who was put to death for his veiws on the assassination of Caesar.

Abraham

He was a shepherd from the city of Ur, in Mesopotamia, who would later become known as the 'Father' of the Hebrew people. According to tradition he was commanded by God to move his family to the area of Canaan where he would start the Hebrew nation.

Louis the German

He was a son of Louis the Pious, who took control of the area of modern day Germany when the empire was divided between he and his brothers.

Gregory I

He was a strong pope, known as Gregory the Great, who strengthened the power of the papacy (office of the pope) and the church. He extended his power to include worldly politics and not just spiritual matters.

Aristotle

He was a student of Plato who tutored Alexander the Great, and invented a method for arguing according to rules of logic. This eventually led to the idea of the scientific method.

Siddhartha Gautama

He was a young nobleman who after years of pampering decided to look for the meaning of life. He eventually became enlightened and from then on was know as Buddha, who founded the religion of Buddhism.

Venerable Bede

He was an English monk who wrote a history of England in 731, which is considered one of the best works of the midieval ages.

John Wycliffe

He was an English reformer who translated the Bible into Anglo-Saxon, and spread radical teachings. He taught that Jesus is the head of the church not the pope, and that the Bible is the final authority for Christian life.

Kautilya

He was an adviser to Chandragupta and wrote a book called the "Arthasastra", on how to rule an empire through strong policies.

Ramses II

He was known as the greatest of the Egyptian pharaohs and ruled from around 1290 to 1224 B.C. He was known as a great warrior, and for his many building projects all around his kingdom.

Otto the Great

He was made king of Germany in 936 and formed a close alliance with the Church in order to limit the power of the nobles. In return for his military service to the pope he was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 962, creating the Holy Roman Empire.

Seleucus I

He was one of Alexander the Great's generals, who wanted to reestablish the Macedonian rule in the Indus Valley. He and Chandragupta fought a war in which he was defeated around 305 BC.

Plato

He was one of Socrates' students and considered by many to be the greatest philosopher of western civilization. He explained his ideas about government when he wrote "The Republic".

Peter

He was one of the 12 apostles of Jesus, and the first bishop of Rome. He is also believed by Roman Catholics to have been the first Pope.

Laozi

He was the Chinese thinker who believed that all living things on earth, except humans, followed the Dao, or natural order. His followers called this philosophy Daoism, and believed that humans should study nature and the sciences.

William the Conqueror

He was the Duke of Normandy who led the Norman invasion of England (1066), and became the first Norman to be King of England.

Clovis

He was the Frankish king who converted the Franks to Christianity around 496. He was able to unite all the Frankish people into one kingdom under his rule by 511.

Hugh Capet

He was the French king who succeeded Louis the Sluggard in 987. He was an undistinguished duke from the middle of France, who started the Capetian Dynasty.

Urban II

He was the Pope who called for the first Crusade in 1095. He wanted the European Christian nations to unite to win the Holy Land back from Muslim Turks.

Hector

He was the courageous, and noble hero of Troy, in the story of the Iliad. He was killed in battle with Achilles, the Greek hero, during the Trojan War.

Lothair

He was the eldest son of Louis the Pious, who took the middle kingdom and the title of Emperor after the kingdom was split between the 3 brothers.

Chandragupta Maurya

He was the founder of the Mauryan dynasty, which was the first empire in the Indian subcontinent. With his large army he was able to unit Northern India, and defeat Seleucus, who was a general with Alexander the Great.

Charles the Bald

He was the grandson of Charlemagne who received the western part of the empire (modern day France) after it was divided between the 3 brothers of Louis the Pious.

Achilles

He was the great Greek warrior, from the Iliad, whose only weak spot was his heel. He is eventually killed at the battle of Troy, when he is shot through his heel by Paris, a prince of Troy.

Piankhi

He was the great Kushite King who drove the Libyans out of Egypt and put himself in power around 751 B.C. He united the Nile Valley and started the 25th Egyptian Dynasty, which lasted until 671 B.C. when the Assyrians invaded.

King Cyrus I

He was the great king of Persia who conquered the Babylonians in 539 B.C., allowed the Jewish people to return from exile, and gave the Jews help in rebuilding their temple.

King Minos

He was the mythological king of Crete, who was said to have a monster called a Minotaur (half man, half bull), locked in a maze to kill his enemies.

Cambyses

He was the son of Cyrus who took control of the Persian Empire, after his father was killed in battle in 530 B.C. He expanded the empire to include Egypt but alienated the people by persecuting them for their religious beliefs.

King John

He was the youngest son of King Henry II, and Eleanor of Aquitaine. Known for his cruel behavior and lack of military skill, his reign as king was not a good one. He was later forced to sign the Magna Carta.

Ban Biao

He wrote the "History of the Former Han dynasty", but died before he could finish it. His son and daughter finished it for him.

Hanfeizi

He, along with Li Si, was among the founders of the governmental philosphy of Legalism. They believed that in order to have a stable country you needed to have a strong government with absolute power.

the 4 types of consumers

Herbivore, carnivore, omnivore, and scavenger

by dividing its mass by its volume

How is the density of a substance found?

slightly less than a month

How long does it take to travel through an entire moon cycle?

Process

Human activities used to create, invent, design, transform, produce, control, maintain, and use products or systems

Hominid

Humans and other creatures that walk upright.

Integration by Parts: Choice of u

I = Inverse Trig Function L = Natural log (lnx) A = Algebraic Expression (x, x², x³...) T = Trig function (sinx, cosx) E = e^x

Step 1 (Design Process)

Identify the Need or Problem

Intermediate Value Theorem

If f is continuous on [a,b] and k is a number between f(a) and f(b), then there exists at least one number c such that f(c)=k

Extreme Value Theorem

If f is continuous on [a,b] then f has an absolute maximum and an absolute minimum on [a,b]. The global extrema occur at critical points in the interval or at endpoints of the interval.

Combo Test for local extrema

If f'(c) = 0 and f"(c)<0, there is a local max on f at x=c. If f'(c) = 0 and f"(c)>0, there is a local min on f at x=c.

Critical Number

If f'(c)=0 or does not exist, and c is in the domain of f, then c is a critical number. (Derivative is 0 or undefined)

Brahman

In Hinduism he was the universal soul, believe to be made up of the three lesser gods of; Shiva, Brahmin, and Vishnu.

Dharma

In Hinduism, the divine law that rules karma; it requires all people to do their duty based on their status in society.

Tyrant

In ancient Greece, a powerful individual who gained control of the government by appealing to the common people for support.

Triumvirate

In ancient Rome, a group of three leaders sharing control of the government.

Satrap

In order to control the large Persian Empire Darius divided it up into 20 provinces controled by goveners called Satraps. They ruled their provinces like kings but were always under the control of the Emperor.

Lord

In the feudal system this person was a landowner, who could grant fiefs (land) to a vassal.

5 Divisibility Rule

In the ones place there should be a 5, or 0.

magma

Inside of a volcano

SI

International System of Units (Système International d'unités)

process of the cell cycle

Interphase, mitosis, cytokinesis

Construction Technology

Involves building structures in order to contain, shelter, transport, communicate and provide recreation.

Communications Technology

Involves the accurate transfer of information from a sender to a receiver.

Noun

Isim

Three-field system

It was part of the agricultural revolution, a farming technique that left one field out of three sallow for a year to replenish the soil.

Baldassare Castiglione

Italian aristocrat who wrote "The Courtier", which became a handbook for how to succeed in society

Christopher Columbus

Italian sailor who traveled west to reach China but discovered the islands of the Caribbean instead

Christine de Pisan

Italian-born woman who wrote the first important work about the role women played in society

largest planet

Jupiter

Kinetic Energy

KE = 1/2 mv2

Mechanical Energy

Kinetic energy plus potential energy (KE + PE)

Zeus

King of the Greek gods and ruler of Mount Olympus. He was the god of the sky, thunder, and justice.

7 levels of classification

Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species

He

Kishi, o

Saul

Known as a great warrior, he was chosen the first King of the Hebrews. He became increasingly power hungery and jealous of others. After he was killed in battle his son-in-law David assended to the thrown.

Fief

Land granted by a lord to a vassal in exchange for loyalty and service.

3 evidences for Wegener's theory

Landforms, fossils, and climate

Tibia

Larger of Two Lower Leg Bones; Inside of Leg

Asia

Largest continent in the world, connected with Europe to make Eurasia.

Common Law

Laws that were common to the whole kingdom and were based on past rulings in the courts. This began to replace law codes that varied from place to place.

Rolle's Theorem

Let f be continuous on [a,b] and differentiable on (a,b) and if f(a)=f(b) then there is at least one number c on (a,b) such that f'(c)=0 (If the slope of the secant is 0, the derivative must = 0 somewhere in the interval).

Outer Core

Liquid layer of the Earth's core that lies beneath the mandle and surrounds the inner core

Biotic

Living parts of an ecosystem

biotic factors

Living things

Crete

Located on the edge of the Aegean Sea, this island served as the center of the Minoan Civilization.

Ring of Fire representation

Location of where most volcanoes and earthquakes occur

Cable Stayed Bridge

Long Distance, Big, Support Heavy Loads, look nice, never fail, new design. Leonard Zamkim Bunker Hill Bridge in Boston is the widest cable stayed bridge in the world. The sunshine skyway in Tampa Bay FL.

Femur

Longest & Strongest bone of body located in the thigh

Mandible

Lower jaw bone

Complex

Machinesmade up of various combinations of simple machines

Bolsheviks

Marxist group that sought to lead a revolution against the Czar's government

Law of Conservation of Mass

Mass is neither created nor destroyed during physical and chemical changes in a closed system

Synthetic Material

Material that is not found in nature (glass, concrete, and plastics)

conductors

Materials that allow electric charges to flow through them easily

insulators

Materials that prevent electric charges from flowing through them easily

Calculus

Math of change

Paterfamilias

Meaning 'Father of the Family', In Roman culture the eldest male relative had absolute power over his household.

Hieroglyphics

Meaning 'sacred carving' in Greek, it was the Egyptian form of writing, using pictographs to represent ideas and sounds.

Homo Erectus

Meaning 'upright man', these human like creatures lived about 1.6 million years ago. They are believed to have developed technology, used fire, and had a spoken language. These people are also believed to have been the first to have migrated from Africa.

Diaspora

Meaning dispersal, The Romans forced the Jewish people out of Isreal after they attempted to win their freedom in 132 A.D., and scattered them throughout the Roman world.

Philosopher

Means a person who is a "Lover of Wisdom", and searches for truth no matter where it leads them.

I

Men

Area model

Method of doing multiplication. You use a model to do it

Millimeter or Millimetre

Metric unit Abbrieviation-mm 10x small than centimeter (cm)

Bacteria

Mini-microscopic organisms who have been here since Earth was formed

Tournament

Mock battle in which knights would compete against one another to show off their fighting skills.

Tribute

Money or goods paid to a powerful nation in order to ensure peace between you.

the cause of tides on Earth

Moon and sun's gravitational pull on different parts of Earth's oceans

Last Quarter

Moon phase in which the Moon is waning and 1/4 of the Moon can be seen

New Moon

Moon phase in which the observer cannot see any parts of the lit half of the Moon

Crescent

Moon phase that is less than half full

Gibbous

Moon phase that is more than half full

Waning

Moon phases decreasing in light

First Quarter

Moon phases in which the Moon is waxing and 1/4 of the Moon can be seen

Full Moon

Moon phases in which the observer can see the full lit half of the Moon

Waxing

Moon phases increasing in light

compound microscope

More than one lens

Simple Beam Bridge

Most Common, Short Spans, Light Loads, Often used to bridge land, Highway overpasses

Stupas

Mounded stone structures built over holy Buddhist relics.

Maximilien Robespierre

Mountain member and a leader of the National Convention

Wind

Movement of air

Passive Transport

Movement through cell without using cellular energy

Body Cell

Muscle, skin, blood, any type that makes up portion of body.

Mantle

Mushy/thick liquid layer between the crust and the core

Ammonium Nitrate Chemical Formula

NH4NO3

equinox

Neither end of Earth's axis is tilted toward or away from the sun

Interjection

Nida

Parts of speech

Nitq, danishmaq

Hunter-Gatherer

Nomadic groups whose food supply depends on hunting animals and collecting plants for food.

Xiongnu

Nomadic raiders from the grasslands north of China during the reign of Han dynasty. Emperor Wudi fought against them in the mid-100s BC.

Abiotic

Nonliving parts of an ecosystem

abiotic factors

Nonliving things

atomic number

Number of protons

Oxygen (Molecular Formula)

O

comet

Object of ice orbiting the sun

First Quarter or Third Quarter

Observed during a neap tide

Control System

Odometer, speedometer, gas gauge, oil gauge, temperature gauge.

sea-floor spreading

Older rock gets pushed into trenches and subduction pushes the rock into the mantle, where it then melts and becomes magma

simple microscope

One lens

Darius

One of Cambyses elite body guard, he took over the rule of the empire around 522 B.C. He did this with the help of the 'Immortals', elite Persian soldiers. After restoring order to the empire he continued the conquests of Egypt and Anatolia, but was never able to take Greece.

Empress Lu

One of Liu Bang's wives who seized power with the help of powerful friends at court. She outlived her son and retained control of the throne by naming first one infant and then another as emperor, and then ruling for them.

Mahabharata

One of the great epics of Indian literature which recounts the struggle of the Aryans to conquer India.

Greeks

One of the original cultures of Rome, they migrated from across the Ionian Sea, from Greece, and settle in Southern Italy. They greatly influenced the culture of ancient Rome.

Tragedy

One of the two main types of drama, writen by the ancient Greeks, it usually had a tragic hero who is brought down in the end by a personal fatal flaw. The main themes of these serious dramas were; love, hate, war, and betrayal.

Parasitism

One organism benefits and one is hurt

Predation

One organism benefits and one is killed

Commensalism

One organism benefits and one is left neutral

rotation

Orbit around axis

revolution

Orbit around object

ellipse

Orbit shape of a comet

Producer

Organism that gives energy to consumers - Makes own food

Eukaryote

Organism with at least 1 nuclei in each cell

Lithosphere

Outermost, rigid layer of the Earth that consists of the crust and the rigid upper mantle part of the mantle

Siding

Outside of your house to protect it from the weather and for decoration

the 3 types of seismic waves

P waves (first to arrive), S waves, and surface waves (causes most damage)

Internal energy is a measure of _____________________ .

PE+KE

the 4 subparts of mitosis

PMAT (Prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase)

4 phases of mitosis in order

PMAT (prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase)

Ulna

Part of lower arm with Radius

Radius

Part of lower arm with Ulna

Interchangeable Parts

Parts that are identical so they can be easily replaced

Burghers

People who were in the merchant class and lived in towns.

Darius III

Persian king who lost his empire to Alexander the Great.

the 3 limits to dispersal

Physical barriers, competition, and climate

objects in space that reflect light

Planets, moons, comets, planets, asteroids, and meteors

Vasco da Gama

Portuguese explorer who traveled to Calicut, India in 1497

Constantinople

Previously known as Byzantium, Constantine changed the name of the city and moved the capitol of the Roman Empire here from Rome.

Industrial Processes

Procedures involving chemical or mechanical steps to aid in the manufacture of an item or items

Diffusion

Process by which molecules move from an area of higher concentration to one of lower concentration

Gamete

Product of meiosis

Job Safety

Protection from risk of harm or injury while operating equipment or working Safety Device- Apparatus or attachments that prevent a mechanism from being operated unintentionally or inappropriately

Enzymes

Protiens that speed up chemichle reactions

Framing

Provides a stable frame to which interior and exterior wall coverings are attached

Accuracy

Proximity of the measurement to the true value

Force

Push or pull

She

Qadin, o

the 3 types of heat transfer

Radiation, conduction, and convection

Step 8 (Design Process)

Redesign

reason why moon looks bright

Reflected sunlight

Symbiosis

Relationship between more than 1 organism

Clergy

Religious officials, such as priests, given authority to conduct religious services.

Interphase

Replication

Step 2 (Design Process)

Research the Need or Problem

RNA

Ribonucleic acid

Czar Alexander I

Russian ruler during Napoleon's failed invasion of Russia

6 elements of life

SPONCH (sulfur, phosphorus, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen)

Detritivore

Scavengers

Oceanologist

Scientist that studies the ocean and water life

Hybrid

Scientists call an organism that has two different alleles for a trait.

Step 4 (Design Process)

Select the Best Possible Solution(s)

You

Sen

Games

Sex cells, sperm cells, egg cells

Athena

She is the daughter of Zeus, and goddess of wisdom, skills, and warfare.

Joan of Arc

She was a French peasant girl who became a military leader, inspired by religious visions that told her to organize a French resistance to the English and to have Charles VII, of France, crowned king. She was later tried for heresy and burned at the stake in 1431.

Hatshepsut

She was a New Kingdom Pharaoh that took power when her husband died leaving her the guardian of his son, Thutmose III, a young child. She then claimed the throne for herself and the Kingdom thrived under her rule because she focused on trade instead of war.

Scholastica

She was the sister of Benedict who headed a convent and adapted her brothers rules, for a holy life, for women.

Subject

Shexs

Adjective

Sifet

stars' characteristics classification order

Size, brightness, and temperature

Artisan

Skilled workers who make goods by hand.

Melanoma

Skin Cancer

Cranium

Skull

Gladiators

Slaves in the Roman Empire, who were trained to fight to the death, for the entertainment of the Roman people.

Derivative

Slope of a line curve, Slope of line tangent to a curve

Nucleic Acids

Small molecules that make up protiens

Stomata

Small opening in plant

Sediment

Small pieces of sand, rock, and soil

the 4 states of matter

Solid, liquid, gas, and plasma

input

Something put into a system, such as resources, in order to achieve a result.

Sonic Boom

Sound produced by objects at supersonic speed

Prepasition

Soz onu (a, an,the)

Hernán Cortés

Spanish explorer and conqueror of the Aztec empire (in what is now, Mexico)

Teresa of Avila

Spanish nun who reformed the Carmelite order

Bartolomé de Las Casas

Spanish priest who criticized treatment of Native Americans, and suggested that slaves from Africa be used as laborers instead

encomienda

Spanish system in which a colonist received land and Native American workers, to whom they were required to teach Christianity

conquistador

Spanish word for conqueror; name for Spanish military leaders who fought against the native people of the Americas

Sex Cells

Sperm and Egg cells.

Zygote

Sperm and egg combination

Mitochondria

Stage of respiration that releases most of the energy in glucose

Fourth Crusade

Started in 1204 this Crusade never even reached the Holy Land but instead plundered Constantinople, a Christian City.

Suspension Bridge

Steel Cables are under tension, Steel/Concrete Towers, Big, thick steel cable, concrete piers, concrete Anchors

Vacuole

Storage area of the cell

Foundation

Strong supports at the bottom of a structure that support the floor and walls of the structure, between the flooring and the footing

Footing

Structure that transfers the load (weight) of the house to the soil, supports the foundation

heliocentric (Copernicus's theory)

Sun as the center

Indirect Sunlight

Sunlight that has low concentration or is spread across a large area; causes winter

Direct Sunlight

Sunlight that is highly concentrated or focused in a small area; causes summer

Ingulfing

Surrounds and swallows

Radical

Symbol for root of a number

Plumbing

System of pipes and drains installed in a building for moving water and the removal of wastes

Transportation Technology

Systems and devices that move people and goods from one place to another.

7 Divisibility Rule

Take the number and multiply each digit beginning on the right hand side (ones) by 1, 3, 2, 6, 4, 5. Repeat this sequence as necessary. Add the products. If the sum is divisible by 7 - so is your number. Example: Is 2016 divisible by 7? 6(1) + 1(3) + 0(2) + 2(6) = 21

Factoring

Taking a long polynomial, and simplifying it by taking a common factor.

Olympus Mons

Tallest mountain in the Solar System

the 3 things that determine a biome

Temperature, climate, and precipitation

Step 6 (Design Process)

Test and Evaluate the Solution(s)

2 Divisibility Rule

The # has to be even or, end with a 0,2,4,6, or 8.

10 Divisibility Rule

The # should end in a 0.

Henry II

The 12th century English king who made important changes to the countries Judicial system by the introduction of the jury system (later to be known as Common Law). He married Eleanor of Aquitaine, gaining him rich French lands, and together they had King Richard the Lion-Hearted, and King John.

Ashurbanipal

The Assyrian king who built one of the ancient world's largest libraries, containing over 20,000 clay tablets. The works were separated by subject and cataloged.

Demosthenes

The Athenian orator who tried to warn the Greeks of the threat Philip II and his army posed. He was later defeated in battle at Chaeronea.

Diocletian

The Emperor of Rome (284-305) who divided the empire into east and west (286) in an attempt to rule the territory more effectively. He ruled the empire with an iron fist and when he revived the old religion of Rome it led to the last major persecution of the Christians (303).

Richard the Lion-Hearted

The English king that was left to lead the crusaders in an attempt to regain the Holy Land from Saladin during the Third Crusade. He made a truce with Saladin which allowed unarmed Christian pilgrims to visit the city's holy places.

Charlemagne

The Frankish king who conquered most of Europe and was crowned Holy Roman Emperor by Pope Leo III in the year 800.

Franks

The Germanic people who lived and held power in Gaul. Their leader was Clovis and he would later bring Christianity to the region. By 511 the Franks had united into one kingdom and they controlled the largest and strongest parts of Europe.

Magna Carta

The Great Charter forced upon King John of England by his barons in 1215. It established that the power of the monarchy was not absolute and guaranteed trial by jury, and due process of law, to the nobility.

Euclid

The Greek mathematician who lived in Alexandria and wrote a book called "The Elements", a textbook that became the basis for modern geometry.

Hesiod

The Greek poet who wrote the "Theogony", an epic poem that talks about the Greek gods. Along with Homer, his works provided a lot of the Greek mythology of their gods and heroes.

Mycenaean

The Indo-European people who settled on the Greek mainland around 2000 BC.

St.Francis of Assisi

The Italian saint who founded the Franciscan order of friars in the 12th, and 13th Centures. He believed in treating all creatures, including animals, as spiritual brothers and sisters.

Jesus

The Jewish teacher and prophet who was born in Judea, a province of the Roman Empire. He came as a religious leader and reformer, but was seen as a dangerious revolutionary by the Romans, and some Jewish leaders. He was arrested and crucified around 29 A.D., but is belived to have risen from the dead 3 days later. The followers of this man and his teachings are known today as Christians.

Richard the Lion-Hearted

The King of England from 1189 to 1199, he was the son of King Henry II and Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine. He fought in the Holy Land against Saladin during the Third Crusaded eventually ending in a truce.

Macedonia

The Kingdom, ruled by Philip II, and later by Alexander the Great, that was located north of Greece. The poeple who lived in this mountainous region did not live in city-states, but in small villages. The people of lower Greece viewed the Macedonians as uncivilized.

Augustus

The Latin term meaning "exalted one", was taken by Octavian, the adopted son of Julius Caesar, when he made himself emperor. This was the beginning of the Roman Empire.

Attila

The Leader of the Huns who put pressure on the Rome's borders when he attacked the empire during the 5th c. A.D.

Zoroaster

The Persian profit who started the religion of Zoroastrianism around 600 B.C. To explain why the world has so much suffering in it he taught that the Earth is a battle ground in which good and evil fight eachother. Humanity must choose to do good, not evil.

Pompeii

The Roman city near Naples, Italy, which was buried during an eruption of Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79. which preserved many buildings and art.

Constantine

The Roman emperor who promoted tolerance to all religions in the roman empire and legalized Christianity in 313 A.D.

Mark Antony

The Roman general who was a close friend, and supporter of Julius Caesar. He was one of the three rulers who formed the Second Triumvirate along with Octavian and Lepidus. Later met Queen Cleopatra of Egypt and followed her to Egypt which led to warring between he and Octavian. He later committed suicide along with Cleopatra.

Pompey

The Roman general, who along with Crassus, and Julius Caesar made up the first Triumvirate. He was an ally of Caesar but later the two went to war against eachother ending with Pompey's defeate, and murder in Egypt.

Leif Ericson

The Viking explorer believed to be the first European to reach the New World (in about 1000 AD).

Energy

The ability to cause an object to move

Religious Toleration

The acceptance of people who held different religious beliefs.

pH

The acidity or alkalinity of any liquid

Density

The amount of matter in a given space

Slope

The angle of a line, found by: y=mx+b y= (y2-y1)/(x2-x1)

Sum

The answer to a addition problem

Quotient

The answer to a division problem

Difference

The answer to a subtraction problem

Lunar Phase

The appearance of the light part of the Moon as seen from Earth

Phase

The appearance of the light part of the Moon as seen from Earth

Lay Investiture

The appointment of religious officials by kings or nobles.

Subcontinent

The area of Asia which includes India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, that is cut off from the rest of the Asian continent by high mountain ranges.

Classical Art

The art of ancient Greece in which harmony, order, and proportion were emphasized. It portrayed ideal beauty instead of the realistic form.

temperature

The average kinetic energy of individual particles

Atomic Mass

The average mass of one atom of an element

cell

The basic unit of life

Cleopatra

The beautiful and charismatic queen of Egypt, who was a mistress of Julius Caesar, and later of Mark Antony. She killed herself to avoid capture by Octavian in 30 B.C.

adaptations

The behaviors and physical characteristics that allow organisms to live successfully in their environments

Reincarnation

The belief that a person's soul is reborn time and time again until that person discovers perfect knowledge known as Moksha.

Vinson Massif

The biggest mountain in Antarctica

Mount Everest

The biggest mountain in the world above sea level which is in the Himilayan Mountain Range, Asia

Rocky Mountains

The biggest mountain range in North America which is located in the US

Mauna Loa

The biggest mountain the world, both under and above sea level in Hawaii. 2/3 of it is under sea and 1/3 is above.

Hellenistic

The blending of Greek cultures with those of Persia, Egypt, and India following the conquests of Alexander the Great.

Canon Law

The body of laws governing the religious practices of the Christian church and its members.

Parliament

The body of representatives that makes laws for The English nation. It was created by Edward I in order to raise money for his wars in France, and agianst the Welsh, and Scots.

Aegean Sea

The body of water that is found between Greece and the Anatolian Peninsula.

Phalanges

The bones that comprise the fingers and toes

Denominator

The bottom part of a fraction and is the number of parts there are in the whole

Persepolis

The capital and greatest palace-city of the Persian Empire, destroyed by Alexander the Great.

convection currents

The cause for plates to move

Monopoly

The complete control of a product or business by one person or group. They control both the production and distribution of the product in this type of market.

Second Crusade

The crusades goal was to recapture Edessa but was a failure because of internal disagreements among the crusaders. This led to the lose of not only Edessa but also Jerusalem in 1187. [1145 to 1147]

Fundamental Theorem of Calculus #1

The definite integral of a rate of change is the total change in the original function.

Specialization

The development of skills in a specific kind of work.

Han Dynasty

The dynasty started by Lui Bang, in 202 B.C., who was a great and long-lasting rule. It discarded the harsh policies of the Qin dynasty and adopted Confucian principles; Han rulers chose officials who passed the civil service exams rather than birth.

Twelve Tables

The earliest written collection of Roman laws, drawn up by patricians at the request of the Plebians, about 450 B.C. These laws were carved on twelve tablets and became the foundation of Roman law.

Harappan Civilization

The early civilization that occupied the Indus River Valley and was named after the ancient city of Harappa, which was discovered by archeologists in the area. This civilization was known for its advanced city planning.

Reconquista

The effort by Christian leaders to drive the Muslim Moors out of Spain, lasting from the 1100s until 1492.

Theogony

The epic poem by Hesiod that provided a lot of the Greek mythology.

Iliad

The epic poem, by Homer, that tells of the Trojan War.

Aeneid

The epic poem, writen by the Roman poet Virgil, that told the story of a great Trojan hero, Aeneas.

Middle Ages

The era in European history that followed the fall of the Roman Empire, lasting from about 500 to 1500 - also called the medieval period. This period of time in Europe combines the classical heritage of Rome, the beliefs of the Roman Catholic Church, and the customs of Germanic tribes.

Vernacular

The everyday language of people in a region or country.

Inflation

The extreme drop in the value of money combined with the rise of prices.

Carolingian Dynasty

The family that ruled the Franks from 751 to 987. The Dynasty was started by Pepin The Short, and brought to the hight of its power by his son Charlemagne.

Patriarchal

The father or oldest male is the authority figure in the family.

Matriarchal

The female head of a family or tribal line.

Mauryan Empire

The first Empire to unify most of the Indian subcontinent. It was founded by Chandragupta Maurya in 321 B.C.E. It had a large army which was supported with heavy taxes.

Olduvai Gorge

The first bones of Homo Habilis were found here by Louis and Mary Leakey in the 1960's. It was discovered that these people had stone tools and so their name means 'Man of Skill'.

Face

The flat sides of a 3-D shape

Cytosol

The fluid inside a cell, confused with Cytoplasm

Normal Force

The force one surface exerts on another surface

Frictional Force (Friction)

The force that opposes motion between two surfaces that are touching

Drag

The force that opposes or slows motion in a fluid (liquid or gas); opposite of thrust

Asoka

The grandson of Chandragupta who ruled the Mauryan Empire and brought it to its hight of power. He converted to Buddhism from Hinduism and tolerated other religions when he was the leader.

Scipio

The great Roman general who commanded the invasion of Carthage in the second Punic War, and defeated Hannibal at Zama (circa 237-183 BC).

Nineveh

The great capital city of Assyria, founded by King Sennacherib, was the largest of its time. The city was built along the Tigris River and was surrounded by a wall 3 miles long and a mile wide.

Solomon

The greatest of all the Hebrew Kings, he was the son of King David and Bethsheba, ruling around 962 B.C. He was known for his wisdom and his many building projects in Jerusalem, including the new Temple.

Chlorophyll

The green pigment in chloroplasts, absorbs light energy from the sun

Elevation

The height of an object above sea level

Patrician

The hereditary aristocracy, or ruling class of ancient Rome who held most of the power. They believed they had the right to make the rules based on the fact that their power was handed down through the generations.

Mount Olympus

The highest mountain in Greece, where the ancient Greeks believed many of their gods and goddesses lived.

Brahmin

The highest of the four classes of the caste system, in Hindu culture, traditionally made up of priests.

Mean Value Theorem

The instantaneous rate of change will equal the mean rate of change somewhere in the interval. Or, the tangent line will be parallel to the secant line.

Artificial Intelligence

The intelligence of computers that we add to them

Tamil

The language of the Tamil people who live in southern India. These people where members of three kingdoms that were never conquered by the Mauryan Empire.

Babylon

The largest and most important city in Mesopotamia. It was the capital of the Babylonian Empire around 600 B.C.

Colossus of Rhodes

The largest known Hellenistic statue was created on the island of Rhodes. This bronze statue stood more than 100 feet high. One of the seven wonders of the ancient world was toppled by an earthquake about 255 B.C., later the bronze was sold for scrap.

Tarquin the Proud

The last of the Roman kings who was known for his abusive rule. He was finally driven from the throne in 510 B.C., and led the Romans to declare they would never again be ruled by a king.

8 Divisibility Rule

The last three digits of a number have to be divisible by 8. Or, the number has to be divisible by 4 and 2

4 Divisibility Rule

The last two digits have to be divisible by 4

Fibula

The lateral and smaller bone of the lower leg

Pope

The leader of the Roman Catholic church.

Moses

The man who led the Hebrew people out of slaver, in Egypt, around 1300 B.C., or 1200 B.C. He was hidden by his mother in a basket, and placed on the river were he was discovered by Pharaohs daughter. Later after fleeing to the desert he was called on by God to lead the Hebrew people out of Egypt.

Pheidippides

The man who ran from Marathon to Athens to announce the Greek victory over Persia in the Battle of Marathon (490 BC), and then died.

magnitude

The measure of an earthquake's strength

Weight

The measure of the amount of gravity on an object

Active Transport

The movement of materials through a cell membrane when the cell's energy is required.

dispersal

The movement of organisms from one place to another

Migration

The movement of people or animals from one region to another.

Erosion

The movement of soil/dirt by wind, or water

Salamis

The naval battle, during the Pursian War, where the Greek forces defeated the Persians, shortly after the battle at Thermopylae. The Greek ships were smaller and more maneuverable than the Persian ships.

6 Divisibility Rule

The number has to be divisible by 3 and 2 to be divisible by 6

12 Divisibility Rule

The number has to be divisible by 3 and 4

Dividend

The number in a division problem which is divided by a divisor

Significant Digit

The number of digits that meaningfully contribute to the precision of a measurement

Atomic Number

The number of protons in one atom of the element

Addends

The numbers that add together to make a sum

Factors

The numbers we multiply together to get a product

Fractional Part

The part of a mixed number that is a fraction

Integral Part

The part of a mixed number which is a whole number.

Floor

The part of a room on which one stands

Fraction

The part of a whole

Leg

The part of body which supports you and lets you stand up.

Product

The part of the chemical reaction that is created

Reactant

The part of the chemical reaction that is going to react/ the part your start with

Dynastic Cycle

The patern of rise, decline, and replacement of ruling dynastic families.

orbit

The path an object follows as it revolves around another object

Mesozoic era

The period of time in history when the dinosaurs lived

Year

The period of time that it takes an object to revolve around the Sun

Physical Weathering

The physical breakdown of rocks into smaller fragments without changing their chemical composition

epicenter

The point on the Earth's surface directly above the focus of an earthquake

Angle

The point where two lines meet

Vertex

The points of a three dimentional shape

Interdict

The pope could forbid priests to give the sacraments of the Church to the people of a town, or a country (kicking them out of the church). This was a weapon of the Roman Catholic church in order to punish those who went against the Pope.

Saladin

The powerful leader of the Muslims during the third crusade who captured Jerusalem in 1187, and signed a truce with King Richard the Lion-Hearted in 1192.

natural selection

The process by which individuals that are better adapted to their environment survive and reproduce more successfully than less well adapted individuals do

inheritance

The process by which physical and biological characteristics are transmitted from the parent (or parents) to the offspring

Deposition

The process by which sediment is dropped or settles.

Meiosis

The process by which the number of chromosomes is reduced by half to form sex cells

Irrigation

The process by which water is diverted from streams and other bodies of water, in order to water crops.

Water Displacement Method

The process used to measure the volume of an irregular solid in which the volume of water in a graduated cylinder is subtracted from the volume of water and object in the same graduated cylinder

Cube number

The product of when you multiply 3 of the same number together

Acceleration

The rate at which an object changes speed

substrate

The reactant on which an enzyme works.

Chemical Reaction

The rearrangement of atoms to make new molecules

Neanderthal

The remains of these people were first discovered by quarry workers in the Neander Valley, Germany. They are believed to have lived around 200,000 to 30,000 years ago, when they mysteriously vanished. These people were supposedly very intelligent, and strong, with religious beliefs, and rituals.

Cataracts

The rocky or ruff part of a river that makes it impassable by boats.

Gupta Empire

The second empire in India, founded by Chandra Gupta I, who took the title "Great King of Kings", in A.D. 320

David

The second great king of Israel who came to power after the death of King Saul. He was a powerful, devout, and popular king who united all the tribes of Israel into one powerful kingdom, with Jerusalem as its capital. He is most famous for his battle with the Philistine giant Goliath, whom he killed with a sling-shot.

Appalachian Mountain Range

The second largest mountain range in the US, near the east coast

Simony

The selling of official positions in the medieval Roman Catholic Church.

Gaugamela

The site of a battle in 331 BC between Alexander the Great and Darius III. Alexander emerged victorious. The defeat began the elimination of the Persian Empire.

Assimilation

The social process of absorbing one cultural group into harmony with another. The ancient Chinese government wanted the people to intermix with the newly conquered peoples so that they would be more united.

Inner Core

The solid, dense center of the Earth

Homo Sapiens

The species name for modern humans that means "Wise Men". While Homo Sapiens may have physically resembled Homo Erectus, they had larger brains.

Plasma

The state of matter that does not have a definite shape or volume and whose particles have broken apart; composed of electrons and positively charged ions

Thutmose III

The step-son of Hatshepsut, the female pharaoh, who ruled in his stead while he was a child. In order to claim the thrown it is believed that he may have had Hatshepsut killed. He was a warlike leader who conquered Palestine, and Syria, and also led his forces in to the Southern Kingdom of Nubia.

Varnas

The strict social structure that the Aryans brought with them to the Indus Valley. It is derived from the word 'Varna', which means skin color, and eventually became known as the social structure.

Molecule

The structure of numerous atoms together; the structure of a compound

Atom

The structure that makes up elements

competition

The struggle between organisms to survive in a habitat with limited resources

Geography

The study locations on Earth, and maps

Science

The study of EVERYTHING around us

Biology

The study of animals and plants

Zoology

The study of animals only

Botany

The study of plants only

Geometry

The study of shapes, angles, and etc.

Astronomy

The study of stars, planets and outer space

Communication

The successful transmission of information through a common system of symbols, signs, behavior, speech, writing, or signals.

11 Divisibility Rule

The sum of the even digits is subtracted from the sum of the odd digits. The result is either 0 or divisible by 11.

solstice

The sun is overhead at 23.5 degrees

Construction

The systematic act or process of building, erecting, or constructing buildings, roads, or other structures.

Domestication

The taming of wild animals such as horses, dogs, and pigs, for human use.

Intertia

The tendency of an object to resist change in motion

Roof

The top of a structure

Numerator

The top part in a fraction and is how many parts are shaded, cut, taken, etc. from a whole

heat

The total energy of all particles

Thermal Energy

The total energy of the particles that make up an object

Myth

The traditional stories of a culture that tell about their gods and heroes.

Convection

The transfer of thermal energy by the movement of particles

Radiation

The transfer of thermal energy by waves

Conduction

The transfer of thermal energy through direct contact

Treaty of Verdun

The treaty that divided the carolingian empire into three sections, to be split between the three sons of Louis the Pious, signed in 843.

Manufacturing

The use of machines, tools and labor to make things for use or sale

Technology

The way that people use knowledge, tools, and inventions to meet their needs.

Latins

These ancient people were the first to settle in what would become the city of Rome, and are known as the first Romans.

Sacrament

These are important religious ceremonies, in the Christian church, that help pave the way to salvation. [ex. Baptism, Communion, Marriage]

Legalists

These are people who believe in the philosphy of legalism. That is they believe that governments should rule with absolute control over its population.

Monsoon

These are strong seasonal winds that can bring powerful storms to a region sometimes causing massive floods.

Upanishads

These are the interpretations of the Vedic Hymns, that Hindu teachers wrote down between 750 and 550 B.C.

Torah

These are the most sacred of the Hebrew writings, comprising the first 5 books of their bible. (What is also known as the Old Testament in the Christian faith.)

Abbots

These men were the religious leaders of a monastery.

Indo-Europeans

These people are thought to have been a nomadic tribe who came from the plains of the Caucasus Mountains, and then spread out from there.

Phoenicians

These people did not have a united country, but instead occupied a number of city-states in the modern area of Lebanon. They were accomplished sailors, and ship builders, who became powerful traders in the Mediterranean region, around 1100 B.C.

Medes

These people had a large empire just east of the Assyrian empire. They joined forces with the Chaldeans in 612 B.C. in order to conquer the Assyrians and burn their capital, Nineveh, to the ground.

Cro-Magnon

These people who are identical to modern humans appeared around 40,000 years ago. They had new tools, planned hunts, and appear to have migrated from Northern Africa to Asia and Europe.

Germanic Invaders

These various groups moved into the lands of the Roman Empire and eventually took them over. They were Germanic people who were forces South in the Roman lands by the invading Huns.

Bodhisattvas

These were enlightened persons who could become a Buddha but have chosen to postponed nirvana in order to help others attain enlightenment.

Civil Servise

These were government jobs that people were able to get if they passed a written examination. The government of the Han emperor Wudi provided schools to study Confucianism so they would have educated people to fill these posts.

Upper and Lower Egypt

These were once two separate kingdoms, in what would become known as Egypt, until they were united under one pharaoh. The pharaoh Narmer is usually accredited with the unification of Egypt but it could have been done by a pharaoh know as the "Scorpion King".

Scribe

These were professional record keepers.

Pyramid

These were the huge tombs, or burial places, for the pharaoh's of ancient Egypt. They believed that a person lived on after death and so they wanted their tombs to be a palace where they could live out eternity.

Tribune

These were the officials elected by the plebeians to protect their rights from the unfair acts of the Patricians.

Peasant

These were the people on the lowest level of feudal society. They were not of noble birth, or in high possitions. They were the people who worked the land.

Shang

These were the people who ruled in Northern China around 1700 B.C. to 1027 B.C. They were the first ruling dynasty to leave written records behind.

Sea People

These were unknown invaders, possibly from many different cultures, who invaded Egypt and helped to bring an end to the Egyptian Empire.

Helot

These were what the ancient Messenians were called after they were conquered by the Spartans in 725 B.C. They became the slave labor, forced to live on the land they worked for the Spartans.

Brahmin

They were Aryan priests, and the most respected of the four main social groups of that culture.

Crust

Thin, outermost layer of the Earth; also the uppermost part of the lithosphere

Secular

Things concerned with worldly matters rather than spiritual, or church matters.

Senate

This 300 member branch of the Roman government controled both the legislative and administrative functions of the government. Originally only the aristocracy were allowed into the Senate but later the Plebians were allowed to join.

Ice Man

This Stone Age man, called Otsi, was found frozen in the Italian Alps by two German hikers. He is believed to have died there around 5,000 years ago, and has given scientist a new insight in the early age of man.

Battle of Legnano

This battle took place in 1176 between Fredrick I "Barbarossa", and the Lombard League (a group of Italian merchants) who were joined by the Pope. Fredrick's knights were beaten by the Lomard League's foot soldiers who were using cross bows, forcing him to ask for peace.

Meroe

This city lies close to the Red Sea, and became an important trading center for the Nubian people. The golden age of the Nubian people started here when they were forced out of Egypt by the Assyrians.

Carthage

This colony, founded by the Phoenicians in 814 B.C., was located in Nothern Africa, in what is now the country of Tunisia. This would be the greatest of all the Phoenician colonies.

Plebeian

This group of ancient Romans made up most of the population, and consisted of farmers, artisans, and merchants.

Commercial Revolution

This included the expansion of trade and new ways of doing buisness that transformed the European economies.

I Ching (Yi Jing)

This is a book of oracles, or predictions, in which a person throws a special coin and then interprets the meaning from the book. It usually offers good advise and, or common sense.

Delta

This is a broad, marshy, triangular area of land formed by silt deposits, at the mouth of a river.

City-State

This is a city which acts as an independent country, with its own government and ruling body. Ur, in Sumer, is said to be the first city-state to have ever developed.

Vedas

This is a collection of four, Aryan, religious texts which show prayers, magical spells, and instructions for performing rituals.

North China Plain

This is a fertile area, known as China's heartland, between the Huang He and Chang Jiang rivers.

Untouchables

This is an Indian social group which exists outside of the Caste system. The people of this group are considered impure, and beneath animals in importance.

Empire

This is created when a single ruler brings together a number of people, nations, and previously independent states under their control.

Loess

This is fertile soil that is blown in from the deserts of Northern and Western China. This is the soil that gives the silt of the Huang He, or Yellow River, its distinctive color.

Asia Minor

This is the Peninsula, also known as Anatolia, which is surrounded on three sides by the Black Sea, Aegean Sea, and the Mediterranean Sea.

Covenant

This is the agreement made between two people, or groups of people. In the Jewish (Hebrew) tradition, Abraham made a covenant with God that he and his descendents would worship no other gods.

Monotheism

This is the belief in only one God.

Filial Piety

This is the belief that a person should respect their parents and ancestors.

Daoism

This is the belief, started by the Chinese philosopher Laozi, that the world has a natural order and that all creatures need to follow it. He believed that all creatures on earth follow the natural order, except humans. Followers of Daoism tend to study nature through the sciences in order to understand the natural order.

Moksha

This is the highest form of enlightenment that a person can achieve in Hinduism. A place of perfect being, which is achieved through the constant cycle of reincarnation.

Nirvana

This is the highest level of enlightenment that a person can achieve in Buddhism. This is when a person is released from the human bondage of selfishness and pain.

Indus Valley

This is the site of the ancient Harappan Civilization which lived in this valley around 2300 B.C. They were advanced city planners and are known for their many farward thinking innovations such as indoor plumbing and a grid based city plan.

Pictographs

This is the use of pictures to represent words, and was the first form of writing used before more complex systems were created.

Brahman

This is the world's soul, according to Hindu belief, and consists of the souls of everything on Earth. It is also believed that this great god of Hinduism, consists of three lesser gods; Vishnu, Shiva, and Brahma.

Cuneiform

This means wedge-shaped. This was a form of writing developed by Sumerian scribes which used pictographs, or symbols, to show the meaning of a word.

Persia

This mighty empire first achived greatness under the rule of Cyrus the Great, in 550 B.C. This empire would last for generations and eventually encompass Egypt, Anatolia, and lands east into India.

Magyars

This nomadic group attacked Western Europe from the east, sweeping across the plains of the Danube River. They came from what is now Hungary and were known for their great horsemanship.

Bronze Age

This period started in Sumer around 3000 B.C. when people started to use bronze to make weapons instead of stone and copper.

Qin Dynasty

This powerful, ruling family, came out of the state of Qin and replaced the ruling Zhou Dynasty. They used the philosophy of Legalism to rule their subjects and impose peace.

cycling matter

This refers to the natural cycles of specific types of matter such as the nitrogen cycle, the carbon cycle and the water cycle

Catal Huyuk

This site is believed to be one of the oldest settlements in the world. The people, who lived here around 72,000 years ago, in the Neolithic age, were farmers lived in mud brick houses.

Mandate of Heaven

This stated that the gods had given the right to rule to the emperor. He was allowed to rule while he was just and good but if he become evil or foolish the gods would take his power away.

Chivalry

This was a Code of conduct for knights during the Middle Ages in which they were required to be loyal to their feudal lord, God, and their chosen lady.

Avignon

This was a city in southern France which became home to the Papacy from 1305 to 1377. When Clement V was elected pope in 1305 he moved the the center of Church power to this city.

Excommunication

This was a form of punishment for not following Church law. It ment that a person was banned from the Church and its sacraments, in other words, you could not go to heaven.

Acropolis

This was a fortified hilltop where people would go for portection, and to discuss government issues.

Dictator

This was a leader, who was elected by the Consuls, and approved by the Senate, to rule for six months during times of crisis. These men would have absolute power to make laws and control the military while in office.

Romanesque Style

This was a style of archetecture that was used in the building of churches from between 800 and 1100 AD. This style was characterized by thick walls, small windows, and rounded arches.

Caste

This was a term coined by 15th c. Portuguese explorers to explain the social structure of the Indian people. The system was originally created by the Aryans to seperate their people from the groups they had conquered.

Ur

This was a thriving city-state, in the region of Sumer, in what is now Southern Iraq. The people of this city had a class system, religious orders, and a thriving economy which were helped by their ability to irrigate their crops.

Prehistoric

This was a time period around 5000 years ago, before writing was invented.

Oracle Bone

This was an animal bone or tortoise shell which was used, by a priest, to ask questions of the gods. They would carve the question into the bone or shell and then heat it with a hot poker. When the shell, or bone cracked the priest would decipher the gods answer.

Palestine

This was an area of land that would consist of modern day Isreal, Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan, that lie along the Mediterranean coast. This region would later be named Palestine by the Romans after the Philistine people who lived there.

Estates-General

This was an assembly of representatives from all three of the estates, or social classes, in France. It was a government body created to increase the power of the king over the nobility.

Papyrus

This was an early form of paper made by the Egyptions, from reeds found in marshy areas.

Mummification

This was done to the bodies of high ranking Egyptians who wished to have their bodies preserved for all time. A body was embalmed and dried to keep it from decaying and then wrapped and placed in a sarcophagus, or coffin.

New Kingdom

This was the Kingdom that was set up after the Hyksos were driven from Egypt. The rulers of this period, roughly 1570 to 1075 B.C., were set on making a mighty empire and conquered many lands with new weapons and technology.

Legion

This was the Roman military unit, made up of 5,000 foot soldiers (infantry). This unit could be further divided into smaller groups of 80 men, called a Century.

Lucy

This was the adult skull of a female Hominid, discovered by Donald Johnson, in Ethiopie. She was named after the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds".

Canaan

This was the ancient home of the Hebrew people, which included much of the area of Palestine.

Knossos

This was the capital city of the Minoan people, located on the island of Crete. The city was first excavated in the late 19th, early 20th centuries, and showed that the Minoans were an advanced and largely peaceful people.

Sumer

This was the first group of people to form a large civilization with advanced cities, with a ruling dynasty based in their capital of Ur.

Israel

This was the land, along the Mediterranean Coast that was formaly called the land of Canaan. The Hebrew people conquered this land after they escaped Egypt, and formed the Kingdom of Israel.

Ten Commandments

This was the moral code that was given to Moses, by God, on top of Mount Sinai. These laws were the new covenant between the Hebrew people and God, which were supposed to tell the people how to live good lives.

Mesopotamia

This was the site of one of the first advanced civilizations. Meaning 'Land between the rivers' in Greek, it incompases the area between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers.

Shang Di

This was the sumpreme god of the Han people of China.

Pharaoh

This was the title given to the rulers of Egypt who were thought to be gods in their own right.

Suspension System

Tire axles, shocks springs

Sublimation

To change directly from a solid to gas or vice versa. This skips the liquid state. Carbon dioxide sublimates into dry ice

Enlightenment

To have great wisdom.

Hold

To keep from falling or moving; support Lift is an upward force used to overcome gravity

Thrust

To push or drive quickly and forcibly

Rotate

To spin on an axis

Revolve

To travel around

atomic mass

Total mass of protons, neutrons, and electrons

Sangha

Traditionally these were Buddhist monks, but know it is a term used for anyone who follows Buddhism.

conduction

Transfer of heat through direct contact of molecules

radiation

Transfer of heat through space

convection

Transfer of heat through the motion of fluids

the 3 boundaries

Transform, convergent, and divergent

where the ocean floor gets destroyed

Trenches and subduction

Spectrum

True 7 colors of natural light

Caltrops

Two inch iron spikes thrown on battlefields intended to wound horses.

Consuls

Two officials from the patrician class who were appointed each year to lead the Roman Republic. They would supervise the government and command the armies during their terms of office. In case of disagreements one always had the right to veto (turn down) the others decision.

Mutualism

Two organisms benefit from the relationship

Cantilever Bridge

Type of Beam Bridge, Big, Long span, Tobin Bridge in Boston, First of Forth Bridge in Scotland

Woodrow Wilson

United States President during World War I

Humorous

Upper Arm Bone

Insulation

Used usually to keep in heat or air conditioned air

Observation

Using 5 senses or watching to describe an object.

Steel or Concrete Arch Bridge

Vary in size, strength, and length. Longfellow Bridge in Boston, Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls.

A _____________ is a quantity that has both a magnitude and a direction.

Vector,

Spine

Vertebral column

location of noble gases

Very last column on the right

seismic waves

Vibrations that travel through Earth carrying the energy released during an earthquake (helps find the epicenter)

Subsystems of a Vehicle

We will use a car as an example

the gravitational pull of the moon on the Earth

What causes the rise and fall of the oceans (tides)?

lava

What comes out of a volcano

diamond

What is the hardest mineral known?

waning

What phase is the moon in when the visible portion is decreasing?

waxing

What phase is the moon in when the visible portion is increasing?

Pangaea

What was the last supercontinent called?

Squire

When a Page reached the age of 14 he was able to become a servant of a Knight who would then train him.

Polytheism

When a culture or person believes in more than one god.

Autocracy

When a government has unlimited power and uses it anyway they wish. This was the governmental philosophy of Shi Huangdi.

Bureaucracy

When a government needs to have smaller departments to help divide up the work of the whole. It is believed Confucius laid the ground work for bureaucracy in China with his belief in the importance of education.

Neutral pH

When a liquids pH is 7.0

Alkaline

When a liquids pH is higher than 7.0

Acidic

When a liquids pH is lower than 7.0

Cultural Diffusion

When a new idea or object is spread from one culture to another.

Dynasty

When a ruling family passes the power down from father to son in a long succession.

Retrieval

When a stored message is decoded.

Racking

When a structures angels change and are no longer the same degrees.

liquefaction

When loose soil turns into liquid mud

Slash-and -Burn Farming

When people cut down trees or grasses and burned them in order to clear land for farming.

Lunar Eclipse

When the Moon appears dark because the Earth blocks the Sun's light from reaching the Moon

Solar Eclipse

When the Moon passes between the Sun and the Earth and blocks the Sun's light

Theocracy

When the ruler of a country, or empire, has absolute religious authority, and/or rules as a god.

Destination

Where a communication ends

Source

Where a communication originates

Land Breeze

Wind from the land to the ocean

Sea Breeze

Wind from the ocean to the land

the 3 means of dispersal

Wind, water, and other living things

Fourteen Points

Woodrow Wilson's plan for world peace, proposed in 1918

Arthasastra

Written by Kautilya, one of Chandragupta's advisors, who wrote a ruler's handbook outlining how to rule a large empire. He suggested toughminded policies such as spying, and political assassination.

Annals and Histories

Written by Tacitus this book expressed the good and bad of imperial Rome.

Design Brief

Written plan that identifies a problem to be solved, its criteria, and its constraints; used to encourage thinking of all aspects of a problem before attempting a solution.

Possive case

Yiyelik hal (mensubiyyeti)

Adverb

Zerflik

orthographic projection

a 2-D, or flat, representation of a 3-D object using views of each side of the object.

structure of a monosaccharide

a 5 or 6 carbon ring

Continental System

a blockade that stopped all French and allied ships from trading with Great Britain to prevent that nation from funding the rebellion against Napoleon

acceleration

a change in velocity speeding up, slowing down, changing direction a = final velocity - initial velocity / time

joint-stock company

a company in which investors buy shares of stock, receiving a portion of the profits, but only risk losing the amount of their investment if it failed

Wedge

a device that is thick at one end and tapers to a thin edge at the other end

Engineering Drawing

a drawing created to communicate specific details about an object following specific design guidelines

zygote

a fertilized egg; it is diploid

Inclined Plane

a flat sloped surface

coup d'état

a forced transfer of power

mutation

a genetic mistake

theocracy

a government in which church and state are joined and whose officials are considered to be divinely inspired

Period

a horizontal row of elements on the periodic table

caravel

a light, fast sailing ship with a rudder and lateen (long, triangular) sails

Suspension subsystem

a mechanical system of springs or shock absorbers connecting the wheels and axles to the body of a wheeled vehicle

Multiview Drawing

a method of drawing views of an object as it is seen from different positions and arranged in a standard order

Protestant Reformation

a movement beginning in the 1500's to reform the Roman Catholic Church, which led to a split of the church between Catholics and Protestants

humanism

a movement that emphasized the possibilities of individual accomplishment and the almost limitless potential of the human mind

Interchangeable parts

a part of a product that can easily be replaced and used in other area of the product so that it can be quickly fixed.

Orbital

a path that goes around a central point (not always round); used to show the location of electrons in an atom

plebiscite

a question put before all voters

Jainism

a religion founded in India in the sixth century BC, whose members believe that everything in the universe has a soul and therefore shouldn't be harmed. Mahavira founded this religion.

counterrevolution

a revolution against a government established by a revolution

Lever

a ridged bar that is free to pivot or rotate on a fixed point

nationalism

a sense of identity and unity as a people

monosaccharide

a single sugar molecule that is the monomer of a carbohydrate

organelle

a specialized cell structure that performs a specific job within a cell

Truss

a strong, supportive structure made of triangles

Electron

a subatomic particle with a negative charge

Neutron

a subatomic particle with a neutral charge

Proton

a subatomic particle with a positive charge

Compound

a substance composed of two or more elements that are chemically combined

Pure Substance

a substance in which there is only one type of particle; includes elements and compounds

neutral

a substance that is 7 on the pH scale, its neither acidic or basic.

Element

a substance that is made of only 1 type of atom; cannot be separated or broken down

Guidance Subsystem

a system of equipment for guiding the path of a vehicle

Suspension/Support

a vehicular system that produces proper support for the weight of the vehicle and cargo

Group

a vertical row of elements on the periodic table

d/dx[a^x]=

a^x*lna

fitness

ability of an organism to survive and reproduce in its environment

__________ is the rate of change of your velocity

acceleration

ecosystem

all the organisms in a particular location, including their non living environment

Triple Entente

alliance between France, Russia, and Great Britain

If aluminum has a higher specific heat than copper, then if you heat a gram of each to 100 degrees, and put them each into 1 liter of water at 20 degrees , then the water with the ___________ in it will end up with a higher temperature in the end.

aluminum

Napoleon Bonaparte

ambitious military leader who became emperor of France

Cutting

an action that causes material to be removed

Linear Equation

an equation whose graph forms a straight line

Renaissance

an era of renewed interest and remarkable progress in art, literature, science, and learning in Europe, beginning in Italy in the 1300's

guillotine

an execution device that drops a sharp, heavy blade through the victim's neck

Polynomial

an expression with two or more terms

Screw

an inclined plane wrapped around a cylinder

Encoder

an object which turns message data and sounds into codes that can be sent

goal

an objective that a person or piece of technology wants to obtain and works to achieve

gland

an organ that secretes hormones into the bloodstream

phenotype

an organisms physical appearance

location of glycogen

animal liver and muscles

polypeptide

another name for a protein

Marxism-Leninism

another term for Bolshevism

Charles Borromeo

archbishop of Milan who implemented the reforms decreed by the Council of Trent, such as building schools for priests

Franz Ferdinand

archduke of Austria-Hungary whose assassination led to World War I

metals

are a good conductor of both electricity and heat. Metals are usually malleable and shiny.

Primary Processes

are processes that change raw materials into industrial materials

Secondary Processes

are processes that turn industrial materials into finished materials

budding

asexual reproduction in which part of the parent organism pinches off and creates a new organism

gravity

attraction between all objects depends on MASS and DISTANCE

kingdom plantae

autotrophic, multicellular, eukaryotic, cell walls of cellulose

Temperature is a measure of ________________________________

average kenitic energy

an example of prokaryote

bacteria

ligament

band of connective tissue that holds the bones together

Battle of Verdun

battle in which Germany tried to kill as many French soldiers as possible, believing the French could not bear to see this historic city captured

circulatory system

body system consisting of the heart and blood vessels that circulate blood through the body

digestive system

body system the breaks down food and absorbs nutrients

Metatarsal

bones of the foot between ankle and toes

codominance

both genes contribute to the phenotype of the organism

An elastic collision is when after the collision the objects _________________________ and therefore have different velocities.

bounce

Suspension bridge

bridge that hangs between two tower-like structures with cables

Hundred Days

brief period of renewed glory for Napoleon

amino acid

building block of a protein

simple sugar

building block of carbohydrate

monomer

building block or small molecule; can be linked into long chains.

four main biological molecules

carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids

4 macromolecules of life

carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acid

meiosis

cell division that results in four gametes with half the number of chromosomes; produces haploid cells

mitosis

cell division which keeps the chromosome number and creates two identical daughter cells; produces diploid cells

interphase

cell grows, performs its normal functions, and prepares for division

location of phospholipids

cell membranes

prokaryote

cell with NO NUCLEUS or membrane bound organelles, mostly bacteria; contains a cell membrane, cytoplasm, DNA, and ribosomes only

eukaryote

cell with a nucleus and membrane bound organelles

haploid

cells containing half the chromosomes or only one chromosome from each homologous pair; ex. gametes

The force that keeps a car turning around a corner, pushes the car in the direction _____________, and is called _____________ .

center, centripetal

evolution

change over time; process by which modern organisms descended from ancient organisms

hormone

chemical messengers secreted by glands into the blood

bourgeoisie

city-dwelling merchants, factory owners, and professionals

Finishing

coats or modifies the surface of parts or products to protect them, make them more appealing to the consumer or both

endocrine system

collection of glands that secrete hormones into the blood which regulate growth, development, and homeostasis

net force

combination of all forces acting on an object

Net Force

combination of all the forces acting on an object

gene pool

combined genetic information of all the members of a population

ceramic

comes from the word pottery, often found in porcelain, china, bricks, plates, etc

cell membrane

composed of phospholipids and proteins; allows molecules to enter or exit the cell

acid

compound that release H+ ions in solution; pH less than 7

base

compound that releases OH- ions in solution; pH greater than 7

glycogen

compound used by animals to store carbohydrates in the liver and skeletal muscles

Francisco Pizarro

conqueror of Inca Empire in Peru, for the Spanish

multiview drawing

consists of two or more views of a 3D object

An object moving at a constant speed in a circle has ___________ (no, constant) acceleration.

constant

carnivore

consumer that eats animals or meat

herbivore

consumer that eats plants

carbohydrates

contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; main source of energy for body, commonly end in "ose"

virus

contains DNA or RNA surrounded by a protein coat; needs a host cell to reproduce so is not considered living

nucleus

contains the DNA and controls the cell

denitrification

conversion of nitrates in the soil by bacteria into nitrogen gas

Transmitter

converts electrical currents into radio waves, which are then sent out over an antenna

Trig Identity: 1=

cos²x+sin²x

incomplete dominance

creates a blended phenotype; one allele is not completely dominant over the other

Dmitri Mendeleev

creator of the periodic table

Martin Luther

critic of the Roman Catholic Church whose ideas sparked discussion about its practice and beliefs, and lead to the founding of Lutheranism

location of translation

cytoplasm/ribosome

Design

decision-making process that produces plans for products or systems that meet human needs and wants or solve problems.

annulled

declared invalid based on church laws

semi-permeable/selectively permeable

describes a cell membrane because it controls the substances which are allowed to enter/exit the cell

diploid

describes a cell with both homologous chromosomes present

Isotonic solution

describes a solution outside a cell whose concentration of dissolved substances is equal to the concentration of dissolved substances inside the cell

HYPERtonic solution

describes a solution whose concentration of dissolved substances outside the cell is higher than the concentration of dissolved substances inside the cell

Hypotonic solution

describes a solution whose concentration of dissolved substances outside the cell is lower than the concentration of dissolved substances inside the cell

double helix

describes the structure of DNA

Marketing

determines what types of products should be made and makes sure that the company understands what the consumer wants and needs.

Production

develops a plan and mass-produces the product

energy pyramid

diagram that shows the energy available to each trophic level in an ecosystem; 10% is passed on to upper levels, the rest is lost as heat

cladogram

diagram that shows the evolutionary relationships among organisms based on derived characters; resembles a timeline

natural variation

difference among individuals of a species; results from mutation and sexual reproduction

concentration gradient

difference in concentration from one area to another (i.e. inside of cell compared to outside of cell)

concentration gradient

difference in concentration of a substance on two sides of a membrane

hydrophobic

dislikes water

Work is equal to force times __________.

distance

cell division

division of a parent cell into two identical daughter cells

cytokinesis

division of the cytoplasm

Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen

document written by the National Assembly advocating equality, freedom of speech, and freedom of religion

Eukarya

domain of organisms that contain nuclei

Eukaryota

domain of organisms that contain nuclei, includes animals, plants, fungi, and protists

DNA

double stranded nucleic acid that stores and transmits genetic information

If you have two objects and you double the mass of one of them, the force of gravity between them ___________

doubles

d/dx[e^x]=

e^x

∫e^xdx=

e^x+C

Brittle

easily broken

capitalism

economic system in which private individuals rather than governments perform most of the economic activity, with the goal of making a profit

When you turn on a hair dryer, ___________ energy becomes __________, ____________, and _______________ energy

electrical, heat, light, michanical

Nonmetal

elements that are dull and are poor conductors of thermal energy and electric current

Metal

elements that are shiny and are good conductors of thermal energy and electric current

Metalloid

elements that have properties of both metals and nonmetals

excretion

elimination of wastes from the body (urine, carbon dioxide, sweat)

The ability to do work is called ____________ .

energy

function of simple carbohydrates

energy

activation energy

energy needed to start a reaction

Halfway down a rollercoaster hill, the potential energy _______ (is equal to, greater than, less than) the kinetic energy.

equal

When a car hits a bug, the car hits the bug with a ___________ force than the force with which the bug hits the car

equal

When there is no energy flowing between different materials, it is at ________________________ .

equalibrium

When there is no net force on an object, it is in _______________ .

equlibrium

plantation

estates in the Americas where cash crops were grown on a large scale

universal systems model

everything has a system or is made of a system including input, process and output

indulgences

exchange of money for forgiveness of sin

Alternative Definition of a Derivative

f '(x) is the limit of the following difference quotient as x approaches c

Raphael

famous painter of both classical and religious subjects, and an accomplished architect

egg

female gamete

output

final product

Ferdinand Magellan

first explorer to attempt to circumnavigate the globe; he was killed on the way, but some of his sailors completed the journey

genus

first part of an organism's scientific name

prophase

first phase of mitosis in which chromosomes appear as X's, nuclear membrane disappears, and spindle starts to form

Beam Bridge

flat beam that is supported by two piers

Decking

flat surface capable of supporting weight, similar to a floor, but typically constructed outdoors

Force is a _______________ (vector,scalar).

force is a vector

Gravity

force that pulls objects towards the center of the earth.

Shear

force that pushes in opposite directions within the material

friction

force that works OPPOSITE to motion sliding friction causes the most resistance!

allele

form of a gene

nucleolus

found inside the nucleus; contains directions to make ribosomes

Ignatius of Loyola

founder of the Jesuits whose search for spiritual peace led him to give up his belongings and practice self-denial

). If you are sliding a box at a constant velocity, then your push must be equal to ________________.

friction

_____________________ is a force that resists motion or force, and it depends on the types of surfaces touching each other, and _________________.

friction, normal force

If you give a box a shove and let go, then the forces (there is friction) on the box are __________, ______________and ____________ .

friction, weight, normal force

d/dx[a^g(x)]=

g'(x)a^g(x)lna

d/dx[e^g(x)]=

g'(x)e^g(x)

oxygen

gas that is a reactant for cellular respiration, and a waste product released during photosynthesis

carbon dioxide

gas that is a reactant of photosynthesis and a waste product of cellular respiration

genotype

genetic makeup of an organism

monosomy

genetic mutation which result in a cell having ONE copy of a chromosome, instead of TWO

trisomy

genetic mutation which results in a cell having THREE copies of a chromosome, instead of TWO

Joining

gluing, welding, bolting, strengthening the bonds

subsidies

grants of money given by governments for purposes such as helping people start new businesses

The force of _____________ causes all things to accelerate toward the center of the Earth.

gravity

When you shoot a basketball, if you keep your hand on the basketball longer, you increase the time of the impulse and therefore the final momentum is ______________

greater

For the same two surfaces, static friction is always _______________ kinetic friction.

greater than

cilium

hairlike projections that help some cells move

cilia

hairlike projections used for movements

Tools that separate

hammer, pliers, band saw, drill press, sander

Tools that fasten

hammer, pliers, wrench, nuts and bolts, nails, screws, screwdriver

rough endoplasmic reticulum

has ribosomes attached which make proteins, that are then transported to the Golgi bodies

heterozygous

has two different alleles for a particular trait

homozygous

has two identical alleles for a particular trait; true-breeding or purebred

secular

having a worldly (ordinary life) rather than spiritual (church life) focus

Duke of Wellington

head of the British troops during the Battle of Waterloo

greenhouse effect

heat retained by the gases of the Earth's atmosphere to maintain the Earth's temperature range

kingdom fungi

heterotrophic, mostly multicellular, eukaryotic, cell walls of chitin

kingdom animalia

heterotrophic, multicellular, eukaryotic, no cell walls

-ln(cosx)+C = ln(secx)+C

hint: tanu = sinu/cosu

signal protiens

hormones, which communicate with othe cells

. Heat always flows from a __________ object to a _____________ object.

hot, cold

allele frequency

how often a form of a gene appears in a gene pool

lipid

huge molecule that contains carbon, hydrogen, and a little oxygen; includes fats, oils. and waxes

sister chromatids

identical chromosome copies that are attached to each other

John Calvin

important Protestant reformer whose writings became the basis of Calvinism

Tools that lift

incline plane, pulley, car jack

cell cycle

includes interphase, mitosis, and cytokinesis

cytoskeleton

includes the microtubules and microfilaments; network of proteins in the cytoplasm that help cell maintain its shape and move

Simple Machine

increases our mechanical advantage and help us apply forces we could not provide with just our own strength.

immigration

individuals joining a population

emigration

individuals leaving a population

An object's resistance to a change in its motion is called its __________.

inertia

Momentum is ___________________________

inertia of motion

propaganda

information designed to influence people's opinions

adaptation

inherited characteristic that increases an organism's chance of survival

You feel comfortable in a 70 degree room, even though your body is at a higher temperature, because air is a good ______________ (conductor, insulator).

insulator

endoplasmic reticulum

internal transport system of the cell, modifies proteins, and synthesizes lipids

Decoder

is a device which does the reverse of an encoder, undoing the encoding so that the original information can be retrieved

Shaping

is the process by which a material is chipped away to change its shape

Separate

is the process by which part of a material is removed, usually through cutting Separating uses tools to shear or machine away unwanted material

Technology

is the use of knowledge, tools, and resources to help people solve problems.

scalar

just magnitude

When you do work on an object, you change its _____________ energy.

kenitic

_____________ energy is the energy of motion.

kinetic

Plant

kingdom composed of multicellular autotrophs

Animalia

kingdom composed of multicellular heterotrophs that digest food

Eubacteria

kingdom everyday bacteria are placed into

Archaebacteria

kingdom for ancient bacteria that live in harsh conditions

fungi

kingdom of heterotrophs that obtain nutrients through absorption

Fungi

kingom of heterotrophs that obtain nutrients through absorption (ex. mushrooms, yeasts)

Arch Bridge

large abutments at the end of the bridge with an arch shape in the middle

polysaccharide

large carbohydrate created by joining smaller monosaccharides together

polymer

large molecule made up of smaller building blocks or monomers.

macromolecules

large molecules that are formed by joining smaller organic molecules together

carrying capacity

largest number of individuals of a population that the environment can support

telophase

last phase of mitosis, chromosomes are in two new cells and nuclear membrane starts to reappear

. But when you are stopping an egg with a sheet, you increase the time of the impulse, but the impulse is the same, and therefore the force is _________________.

less

The car then accelerates _______________ the bug does

less than

hydrophilic

likes water

Contour Lines

lines that connect points of equal elevation

chemical bond

link formed by two electrons that binds atoms togetherl where the energy in a compound is stored

function of waxes

lipids that seal water in or out

function of sterols

lipids that send messages

biotic factor

living organisms that affect an ecosystem

∫secxdx=

ln|secx+tanx|+C

∫tanxdx=

ln|secx|+C

∫1/xdx=

ln|x|+C

axon

long fiber that carries electrical impulses away from the nerve cell body

chromosomes

made of DNA; contain directions for making proteins

Pulley

made of a grooved wheel with a rope or cable wrapped around it

vector

magnitude + DIRECTION

ribosomes

make proteins following instructions on the DNA

smooth endoplasmic reticulum

makes lipids (fats, phospholipids, sterols) needed by cell

Quality Control

making sure that quality remains high during manufacturing

sperm

male gamete

The measure of an object's inertia is its ______________.

mass

cytoplasm

material between the cell membrane and te nucleus

Council of Trent

meetings called by Pope Paul III to make a series of reforms to the church and clarify important teachings, took place between 1545 and 1563

nuclear envelope

membrane containing pores that surrounding the nucleus

mRNA

messenger RNA; type of RNA that carries instructions from DNA

spindle

microtubule structure that separates chromosomes during mitosis

molecular clock

model that uses DNA comparisons to estimate how long two organisms evolved from a common ancestor

Lock & Key Model

models which describes how enzymes "fit" with their substrate, the same way locks fit into keys

plastic

moldable, man-made material that its lightweight, inexpensive, and can easily be made transparent.

ATP

molecule that stores the useable energy created during cellular respiration

impermeable

molecules are not able to pass through the membrane

organic compounds

molecules that contains carbon

nucleotide

monomer of nucleic acids

An object sitting on the edge of a turntable has _______ (more, less, the same) speed as an object sitting closer to the center of the turntable.

more

carbon

most abundant element in all living organisms

domain

most inclusive taxonomic group, larger than kingom, three exist - bacteria, archaea, eukaryota

If you are driving with a book on your front seat, and stop suddenly, the book ______________________ because ______________________

move folwards, beacuse of its inertia

Active transport pumps

move molecules through protein channels from areas of low concentration to areas of high concentration (against concentration gradient) USING ENERGY

diffusion

movement of molecules across a membrane from high to low concentration without energy

simple diffusion

movement of molecules from high to low concentration; does not require energy

facilitated diffusion

movement of molecules through protein channels in the membrane from high to low concentration

active transport

movement of molecules through protein channels in the membrane from low to high concentration requiring energy (ATP)

esophagus

muscular tube connection the pharynx to the stomach

nondisjunction

mutation in which homologous chromosomes or sister chromatids fail to separate, resulting in cells or gametes having one less or one more chromosome than normal

Tools that hold

nail, screws

Middle Passage

name for the second leg of the triangular trade route, bringing captive Africans to the Americas, where they were sold as slaves

deoxyribose

name of the sugar in DNA

paper

natural material from trees that is flexible, but not strong or waterproof

wood

natural material from trees that is strong, but lacks waterproof and flexibility properties

recessive

needs both copies of a gene to show up

If you add up all the forces on an object, you get the ________ force

net

food web

network of all the food chains in an ecosystem

motor neurons

neurons that carry outgoing information from the central nervous system to the muscles and glands

products

new molecules created in a chemical reaction; always written to the right of the -->

abiotic factor

non-living factor that affects an ecosystem

Chemical Formula

notation for a compound using chemical symbols and numbers

location of transcription

nucleus

Copper is good conductor of heat because ________________________________ .

of free electrons

viceroys

officials who ruled large areas of Spain's American colonies in the king's name

hybrid

offspring of a cross between parents with different traits, heterozygous

reactionary

opposing progress in hopes of conditions returning to those of earlier times

When slowing down, if your initial velocity is in one direction, your acceleration is in the ________________ direction.

opposite

large intestine

organ that absorbs water from undigested material

liver

organ that makes bile to break down fats; also filters poisons and drugs out of the blood

mitochondria

organelle in eukaryotic cells where cell respiration occurs; where food is broken down into energy a cell can use

golgibodies

organelle that helps to package things in a cell, organelles that package cellubrium materials and transport them within the cell or out of the cell

mitochondrion

organelle that releases energy from food; reactions for cellular respiration occur here

endoplasmic reticulum (ER)

organelle that transports things in a cell

ribosome

organelle where proteins are made

decomposer

organism that breaks down and absorbs nutrients from dead organisms

detritivore

organism that feeds on animal and plant remains that it did not kill; scavenger

autotroph

organism that makes its own food using photosynthesis

consumer

organism that relies on other organisms for food

heterotroph

organism that relies on other organisms for food; consumer

League of Nations

organization of nations created with the hope of ending future wars

centriole

organizes the spindle fibers to separate chromosomes during animal cell mitosis

kidneys

organs that filter nitrogen wastes from blood to make urine

Ceiling

overhead upper surface of a covered space

Quality control

overseeing all steps in the process to ensure maximum quality

homologous chromosomes

pairs of chromosomes that are the same size, and carry information related to the same trait; one is from mom, the other from dad

biosphere

part of Earth that living organisms inhabit

microtubules

part of cytoskeleton; anchor organelles and create tracks

microfilaments

part of cytoskeleton; help pinch cell in half during cytokinesis

atom

particle made up of protons, neutrons, and electrons

Triple Alliance

partnership that united Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy

osmosis

passive transport of WATER molecules through protein channels from areas of high to areas of low concentration until equilibrium is reached

divergent evolution

pattern of evolution in which two species become more and more dissimilar

indemnity

payment to other countries to compensate for damages caused during war

radicals

people favoring extreme change

metaphase

phase of mitosis in which chromosomes line up in the center of the cell

anaphase

phase of mitosis in which sister chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of the cell

karyotype

picture of all the chromosomes in a cell arranged in homologous pairs

location of cellulose

plant cell walls

invasive species

plants and animals that have migrated to areas where they did not originate; often displace native species by out competing them for resources

cellulose

polysaccharide that is the main component of plant

community

populations of different organisms living in a defined area

______________ energy is the energy due to your height above the earth.

potential

photo

prefix meaning "light"

fossil

preserved remains of an ancient organisms

Desiderius Erasmus

priest and Christian humanist philosopher who wrote about the need for a simple Christian life without the rituals and politics of the church

common descent

principle that all living things have a common ancestor

independent assortment

principle that gens do not influence each other's inheritance because they are separated independently during meiosis

crossing over

process by which homologous chromosomes exchange pieces, resulting in greater genetic variety

evaporation

process by which liquid water turns into a gas when heated

exocytosis

process by which vesicles release their contents outside the cell; type of active transport

photosynthesis

process in plants that takes sunlight, water and carbon dioxide and produce food (glucose) and oxygen

biogeochemical cycle

process in which nutrients are recycled through the biosphere. Examples: Carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorous

Computer Aided Design (CAD)

process of designing on a computer.

cellular respiration

process that breaks down food to make ATP and release carbon dioxide as waste

chemical reaction

process that changes one set of chemicals into another set of chemicals.

protein synthesis

process when info in DNA is used to make a protein

transcription

process when one strand of DNA is used to make a message, mRNA

DNA replication

process where DNA makes a copy of itself before the cell undergoes cell division

translation

process where mRNA is used at the ribosome to make a string of amino acids (protein)

kingdom eubacteria

prokaryotic, can be auto or heterotroph

kingdom archaebacteria

prokaryotic, can be auto or heterotroph, lives in harsh environments

insulin

protein hormone that helps to decrease blood sugar

receptor protein

protein in the cell membrane which receives infor and sends it to the other side of the cell

marker protein

protein in the cell membrane with a carbohydrate chain attached that identifies the cell as belonging to the organism

channel proteins

proteins in cell membrane that allow large molecules (glucose), ions (Na+, Cl-) and water to enter the cell

contractile proteins

proteins responsible for movement in muscles

transport proteins

proteins that carries substances

defense proteins

proteins that fight disease, like antibodies

structural proteins

proteins that provide support, such as those found in tendons and ligaments

enzymes

proteins that speed up chemical reactions; usually end in -ase

Structural Subsystem

provides structural support for all the other vehicle components, and holds them in position

cell wall

provides structure and support around cell membrane of plants, fungi, and some bacteria

function of cellulose

provides support to plant cell walls

Propulsion subsystem

provides the energy to move a vehicle; this can be an internal combustion engine, an electric motor, or rocket engine

Elizabeth I

queen who firmly established England's religion as Protestant, daughter of Henry VIII

Speed

rate at which an object moves

When a person is skating, and throws a snowball, this is called an __________________, and momentum is still _________________

recoil, concerved

Counter-Reformation

reform movement within the Catholic Church

predestination

religious belief that states God has already decided who will go to heaven, and so nothing people do will change their fate

Jesuits

religious order which focused on the reform of the church, spirituality, service to others, education, and the further spread of Catholicism (also called the Society of Jesus)

asexual reproduction

reproduction involving one parent; offspring are genetically identical to the parent

A small car can pull a big trailer because the ___________________________ force is greater than the force of the trailer pulling back on the car.

road?

King Louis XVI

ruler during early years of the French Revolution

Lorenzo de Medici

ruler of Florence who was an important patron (financial supporter) of arts and learning

Atahualpa

ruler of Inca Empire, killed by Spanish invaders led by Pizarro

If you have a 20 N object and a 5 N object, the 20N object will fall at a ______________ (greater, same, less ) rate than the 5 N object, and the force of gravity on the 20 N object is ___________ (greater, same, less than) than the force of gravity on the 5 N object

same, greater

aggregates

sand, gravel, crushed stone, or recycled concrete that are put into composite materials such as concrete and asphalt concrete. Adds strength to the overall composite material.

pH scale

scale that measures the number of H ions in a substance, and determines how basic or acidic the substance is

Michelangelo Buonarroti

sculptor and painter, famous for works such as the Sistine Chapel, the statue "David", and the design of St. Peter's Cathedral

kingdom

second largest taxonomic group; there are six (animalia, plantae, protista, eubacteria, archaebacteria, fungi)

gene

section of DNA that codes for a protein and determines a trait

d/dx[secx]=

secxtanx

d/dx[tanx]=

sec²x

Grigory Rasputin

self-proclaimed holy man and healer, advisor to Czarina Alexandra

Reign of Terror

series of accusations, arrests and executions started by the Mountain

food chain

series of steps in which organisms transfer energy by eating and being eaten

Western Front

series of trenches dug by both the Allied Powers and Central Powers in northern France, resulting in a deadlock

Tarsal

seven short bones which form the ankle

gamete

sex cell; sperm or egg

gametes

sex cells; eggs and sperm

Hand tool

simple handheld artifacts that require human muscle power or air or electric power to make them work

glucose

simple sugar that is used to make ATP through cellular respiration

∫1/√(1-x^2)dx=

sin⁻¹x+C

__________. If you throw an object up, after one second it is moving more ____________, but if you throw an object down after one second it is moving more ___________.

slowly, quickly

First Estate

small, privileged class made up of Roman Catholic clergy in France

bone marrow

soft tissue found in the center of bone that produces blood cells

kingdom protista

some heterotrophic and some autotrophic, some multicellular and some unicellular, eukaryotic, some with cell walls some with out

Henry the Navigator

son of King John I of Portugal, patron and supporter of explorers

Some materials take more energy to heat up, and thus have a greater ___________________ .

spacific heat

antibody

specialized protein made by the body to fight off future infections from a disease causing organism

hemoglobin

specialized protein that carries oxygen on red blood cells

enzyme

specialized protein that speeds up a chemical reaction by decreasing activation energy

____________________ of a material which affects how easy it is to change its temperature is analogous to the inertia which is a measure of easy it is to change its motion

specific heat

___________ is the rate that you travel a certain distance

speed

velocity

speed + direction (it's a vector!!) velocity = distance / time measured in m/s

Friction does NOT depend on _____________________ or _____________________.

speed surface area

The difference between speed and velocity is that ___________ just has magnitude, but ________________ has magnitude and direction

speed, velocity

golgi bodies

stack of flat membranes that receives, sorts, and packages proteins

Golgi apparatus

stack of membranes that modify proteins and creates packages to send them to other locations

S phase

stage of interphase in which DNA is replicated or copied

G2 Phase

stage of interphase in which cell duplicates its cytosol and organelles

G1 Phase

stage of interphase in which cell grows and performs its normal functions

G1 phase

stage of interphase in which cell grows and performs its normal functions

G2 phase

stage of interphase in which cell organelles needed for mitosis are assembled

Balfour Declaration

statement issued by Britain in 1917 favoring the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine

Newton's Law of Inertia states that an object in motion _____________________________ and an object at rest _______________________ unless acted on by an outside force

stay in motion, stay at rest

The law of conservation of momentum states that when there is no external force on a system, momentum _________________________.

stays constant

Guidance System

steering wheel, tires, transmission, gas pedal, brake, clutch

cholesterol

sterol found in cell membranes that keeps the membrane flexible

An inelastic collision is when after the collision the objects ______________________ and therefore have the same velocity.

stick together

If an object is in equilibrium, then the object is ____________ or ___________________.

still, at constant velocity

function of starch

stores energy for plants in cell roots

function of glycogen

stores energy in the animals in liver and muscles

lysosome

stores enzymes to digest food, waste, or worn out cell parts,

function of DNA

stores genetic info

primary structure

structural level of a protein that involves the order the amino acids are placed into

secondary structure

structural level of a protein that involves twisting and folding

tertiary structure

structural level of a protein that is 3D and held together by hydrogen bonds

spindle

structure made from centrioles and microtubules that aligns and separates chromosomes

centromere

structure which hold the two sister chromatids together

homologous structure

structures that have different mature forms but develop from the same embryonic tissues

biochemistry

study of chemicals that make up living things.

ecology

study of interactions between organisms and their environment

Material

substance (chemical, biological, or mixed) that goes into the makeup of a physical object

catalyst

substance that speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction

parts of a nucleotide

sugar, phosphate and base

commensalism

symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits and the other organism is not affected

Engineering Design

systematic and creative application of scientific and mathematical principles to practical ends

neutral

taking no side in a conflict

When a car takes a turn at maximum speed, if it hits a patch of ice, the car then travels is the direction ______________ .

tanjent

Trig Identity: sec²x=

tan²x+1

∫1/(1+x^2)dx=

tan⁻¹x+C

vacuole

temporarily stores food, waste or water in cells

vacuole

temporarily stores food, waste, or water in cells

Central Powers

term for Germany and Austria-Hungary in World War I

Allied Powers

term for Great Britain, France, Russia, and Serbia in World War I

mandates

territories to be ruled by European powers

mercantilism

the European economic policy that called for nations to gain wealth in order to build a strong military and expand influence

Ductile

the ability to be drawn or pulled into wire

Malleable

the ability to be pounded into thin sheets

balance of trade

the amount of goods sold by a country compared to those bought from other countries; a favorable balance of trade meant selling more goods than were bought

weight

the amount of gravity pulling you down Weight = mass x g

Distance

the amount of space traveled

ecological succession

the change in an ecosystem over time

compound

the chemical combination of 2 or more elements in specific amounts

Second Estate

the class in France that was made up the nobility

Third Estate

the class of 97% of France that was made up of the bourgeoisie, artisans, merchants, and peasants

Custom manufacturing

the creation of a limited number of items at a high cost that requires one or two people with a special skill to create a product (ex. your grandma knitting you a sweater).

genocide

the deliberate destruction of a racial, political, or cultural group

chemical digestion

the digestion process in which enzymes are used to break foods into their smaller chemical building blocks

displacement

the distance between the start point and end point

Valence Electron

the electrons in the outermost orbital of an atom

Columbian Exchange

the exchange of plants, animals, and diseases between the people of Europe and the Americas because of contact brought by explorati

Friction

the force that brings moving objects to rest, friction occurs when objects come in contact with each other

classification

the grouping of similar things

fertilization

the joining of the egg and sperm

Receiver

the part of a radio that receives radio waves from the antenna and converts them into electrical currents

mechanical digestion

the physical breakdown of food into smaller pieces

endocytosis

the process by which a cell membrane surrounds a large particle and encloses the particle in a vesicle to bring the particle into the cell; type of active transport

homeostatis

the process by which organisms keep their internal environment relatively stable

homeostasis

the process by which organisms keep their internal environment relatively stable; steady state

feedback

the process in which the results of the output of a system are used to modify or input the input

Weathering

the process of breaking down rocks

Erosion

the process which moves soil from one place to another

Soil composition

the process which moves soil from one place to another

Earthquake

the shaking and trembling that results from sudden movement of part of Earth's crust

Scapula

the shoulder blade

active site

the site on the enzyme that attaches to the substrate

CHNOPS

the six most abundant elements of life. Carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorous, and sulfur.

Velocity

the speed of an object in a particular direction

African Diaspora

the spread of people of African descent through the Americas and Western Europe as a result of the slave trade, eventually spreading African culture throughout the Western world

reactant

the starting materials in a chemical reaction; always found before the -->

reactants

the starting materials in a chemical reaction; always written to the left of the -->

processes

the steps needed to complete a series of identifiable tasks within a system

taxonomy

the study of classification

Earth Science

the study of geology, astronomy, and meteorology

Orthographic Projection

the system by which the views of a multiview drawing are arranged in relation to each other

Mass production

the system of making many of the same items very quickly, usually by machine

Vehical Guidance

the system receiving information needed to operate the vehicle

Vehicle Control

the system that makes changes in speed and direction of a vehicle possible

distance

the total ground covered

. The reaction force to a child pushing on the wall is __________________________________________.

the wall pushing on the child

artery

thick walled muscular blood vessel that carries blood away from the heart

alveoli

thin-walled microscopic air sacs in the lungs where the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide takes place

codon

three mRNA nucleotides that code for a specific amino acid

multiple alleles

three or more alleles exist for a particular trait

capillary

tiny, thin walled blood vessel where substances are exchanged between the blood and the body cells

Drawing Tools

tools used to aid in the process of creating an engineering drawing.

Leon Trotsky

top Bolshevik official who negotiated for peace with the Central Powers

Displacement

total change in position (final position - initial position)

cartilage

tough, flexible tissue that covers the ends of bones and decreases friction

triangular trade

trading network that brought goods from Europe to Africa to be traded for slaves, took slaves from Africa to the Americas to be sold, then brought American goods back to Europe

Safety

training operators and designing workspaces to increase safety

polygenic trait

trait controlled by more than one gene

single-gene trait

trait controlled by only one gene

dominant

trait the will show up in an organism's phenotype if gene is present

function of RNA

transmits genetic info

Distribution

transports the product to the consumers

circumnavigate

travel completely around the world

Treaty of Tordesillas

treaty signed in 1493 dividing the Americas between Spain and Portugal, along an imaginary line

Treaty of Versailles

treaty that ended World War I and punished Germany severely

armistice

truce

Torsion

twisting force

Wheel and Axle

two cylindrical objects fastened together that rotate on a common axis

daughter cells

two identical cells created through mitosis

Unbalanced Force

two or more forces that do not cancel each other out and result in a net force

Balanced Force

two or more opposite forces with a net force of 0N

binomial nomenclature

two part scientific name for an organism; its genus is listed first, followed by its species

atria

two upper chambers of the heart that pump blood intro the ventricles

regeneration

type of asexual reproduction involving regrowth of lost parts

peptide bond

type of bond formed between amino acids to create a protein

cardiac muscle

type of muscle found in the heart which generates its own electrical signal to contract

sexual reproduction

type of reproduction involving the union of egg and sperm resulting in offspring that are not genetically identical to the parent

behavioral isolation

type of reproductive isolation in which two organisms have different mating rituals that prevent them from interbreeding

geographic isolation

type of reproductive isolation in which two populations are separated by geographic barriers like mountains or bodies of water

passive transport

type of transport that does not require energy (i.e. diffusion, facilitated diffusion, and osmosis)

active transport

type of transport which requires a cell to use its own energy ex. endocytosis, exocytosis, moving molecules against concentration gradient

hydrogen bond

type of weak bond holding together the shape of protein.

cancer

uncontrolled cell division

meter

unit of length in the metric system

gram

unit of mass in the metric system

liter

unit of volume in the metric system

solvents

used to dissolve adhesives, or break bonds

punnett square

used to predict outcomes of genetic crosses

Propulsion (vehicle)

uses energy to produce power for motion

chloroplast

uses sunlight to make carbohydrates in plants

chemosynthesis

using inorganic chemicals to make food

adhesives

usually in a liquid state, that adheres or bonds items together. Adhesives come from either natural or man-made sources

biodiversity

variety of organisms that exist in the biosphere

______________ is the change in displacement divided by the change in time

velocity

Walls

vertical, upright structures used to enclose a room or structure, may support weight from above

larynx

voice box; passageway for air moving from pharynx to trachea

The force of gravity is ALWAYS EQUAL TO ______________ (an equation).

w=mg

trench warfare

war fought from trenches

total war

war that requires the use of all of society's resources

Roofing System

weatherproof, overhead structure of a building, supported by the walls, foundation, and footing, often built with trusses

If you move to the moon, your ____________ (mass,weight) will change.

weight

denaturation

when an enzyme changes shape and no longer functions die to high temperatures or wrong pH

base-pairing

when bases of DNA pair up (A-T and C-G)

habitat

where an organism lives

flagellum

whiplike structure some cells use for propulsion

glycerol

with fatty acids, make up the building blocks of lipids

fatty acid

with glycerol, make up the building blocks of lipids

anaerobic

word meaning "no oxygen"

aerobic

word meaning "oxygen"

Engineering

work performed by an engineer,involves the knowledge of mathematical and natural sciences applied with judgment and creativity to develop ways to utilize materials and forces of nature for the benefit of mankind.

Power is _______________ .

work/ time

Research and development

works with marketing to create an idea for the product

Gavrilo Princip

young Serbian who assassinated Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie

Trig Identity: cos²x=

½(1+cos(2x))

Trig Identity: sin²x=

½(1-cos(2x))

cos(π)

−1

sin(3π/2)

−1

cos(2π/3)

−1/2

cos(4π/3)

−1/2

sin(11π/6)

−1/2

sin(7π/6)

−1/2

cos(3π/4)

−√2/2

cos(5π/4)

−√2/2

sin(5π/4)

−√2/2

sin(7π/4)

−√2/2

cos(5π/6)

−√3/2

cos(7π/6)

−√3/2

sin(4π/3)

−√3/2

sin(5π/3)

−√3/2

cos(7π/4)

√2/2

cos(π/4)

√2/2

sin(3π/4)

√2/2

sin(π/4)

√2/2

cos(11π/6)

√3/2

cos(π/6)

√3/2

sin(2π/3)

√3/2

sin(π/3)

√3/2


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