VOCABULARY OVERVIEW: HISTORICAL PERIOD #9

WORLD WAR I, THE ROARING TWENTIES,
THE GREAT DEPRESSION



DIRECTIONS: Prepare for vocabulary quizzes on the words listed.

WILSONIAN PROGRESSIVISM AT HOME AND ABROAD
1912-1916, Ch. 32

III. WILSON ON THE FOREIGN FRONT pages 710-713

IV. WAR ERUPTS IN EUROPE pages 713-719: marauders

V. WHO WERE THE PROGRESSIVES? page 720: marginalized
 

THE WAR TO END WAR 1917-1918, Ch. 33

I. THE UNITED STATES ENTERS THE WAR pages 722-725: maelstrom, depredations,
   belligerents, altruism, demoralized

II. GEARING UP FOR WAR pages 725-731

III. "OVER THERE" pages 731-735: conscription, deployed, dire, axiom,
    juggernaut, incredulously, salient (as in, St. Mihiel)

IV. PEACE pages 735-739: reciprocated, messiah, clique

V. AMERICAN OPPOSITION TO THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES pgs 739-743: repudiation

VI. WOODROW WILSON: REALIST OR IDEALIST? page 744
 

AMERICAN LIFE IN THE "ROARING TWENTIES"
1919-1929, Ch. 34

I. RETURN TO NORMALCY pages 746-749,752: fomented, surcharged, enclaves,
   foundered

II. THE POLES pages 750-751: compatriots

III. PROHIBITION, CRIME pages 752-754: soused

IV. SCIENCE AND FUNDAMENTALISM pages 755-756: hamlet

V. A TIME OF RAPID CHANGE pages 756-765: ploy, debunking, pulchritude,
    straitlaced, poached, virtuoso

VI. A NEW LITERARY MOVEMENT pages 765-767: expatriates

VI. WALL STREET pages 767-768: lionized


Page 2





THE POLITICS OF BOOM AND BUST 1920-1932, Ch. 35

I. THE REPUBLICAN OLD GUARD RETURNS pages 771-774

II. U.S. RETURNS TO ISOLATIONISM pages 774-776: parity

III. TROUBLE, TROUBLE, TROUBLE pages 776-777: gullible

IV. KEEP COOL WITH COOLIDGE pages 777-782: visage, aspirant, irate

V. HOOVER pages 782-785

VI. CRASH! pages 785-786

VII. THE GREAT DEPRESSION pages 786-791: peonage, insidious, supplicants

VIII. FOREIGN AFFAIRS IN THE GREAT DEPRESSION pages 791-793
 
 

THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND THE NEW DEAL
1933-1938, Ch. 36

I. ELECTION OF 1932 pages 795-798: expendable, disgruntled

II. RELIEF, RECOVERY, REFORM pages 798-807: prelude, solvent, harangues

III. PROBLEMS FROM MOTHER NATURE pages 807,810

IV. THE DUST BOWL MIGRANTS pages 808-809: desiccated, exodus

V. REGULATING SECURITIES AND OTHER REFORMS pages 810-814: fracas

VI. THE ELECTION OF 1936 pages 815-816: largesse

VII. FDR AND THE SUPREME COURT pages 816-818: cloistered, vilified

VIII. THE END OF THE NEW DEAL pages 818-821

IX. HOW RADICAL WAS THE NEW DEAL? pages 822-823