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SAT2美国历史词汇:S部分

2021-05-07 14:12     作者 :    

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   越来越多的中国考生选择SAT2美国历史为SAT2考试科目,掌握关于SAT2美国历史的一些词汇对考试是很有帮助的,下面就让我们一起来看看这些词汇吧。


  S


  Sacajawea


  A Native American woman who proved an indispensable guide to Lewis and  Clark during their 1804–1806 expedition. Sacajawea showed the men how to forage  for food and helped them maintain good relations with tribes in the  Northwest.


  Sacco-Vanzetti case


  Anarchist Italian immigrants who were charged with murder in Massachusetts  in 1920 and sentenced to death. The case against Sacco and Vanzetti was  circumstantial and poorly argued, although evidence now suggests that they were  in fact guilty. It was significant, however, because it showcased nativist and  conservative forces at work in America.


  Salutary neglect


  The English government’s policy of not enforcing certain trade laws it  imposed upon the American colonies throughout the late seventeenth and early  eighteenth centuries. The purpose of salutary neglect was largely to ensure the  loyalty of the colonists in the face of the French territorial and commercial  threat in North America. Following British victory in the French and Indian War,  the English ceased practicing salutary neglect.


  Salvation Army


  A welfare organization imported from England to the U.S. in 1880. The  Salvation Army provides food, shelter, and employment to the urban poor while  preaching temperance and morality.


  Scalawags


  A derisive term that Democrats gave to Southern moderates who cooperated  with Republicans during Reconstruction.


  Scopes Monkey Trial


  In 1925, Tennessee teacher John T. Scopes willfully violated a state  statute prohibiting the teaching of evolution in public schools. Prosecutor  William Jennings Bryan and Scopes’s lawyer Clarence Darrow faced off during the  highly publicized trial, and although Darrow lost the case he made a fool out of  Bryan, substantially weakening the anti-evolution cause throughout the U.S.


  Second Bank of the United States


  Chartered in 1816 under President Madison. The Bank served as a depository  for federal funds and a creditor for state banks. It became unpopular after  being blamed for the panic of 1819, and suspicion of corruption and  mismanagement haunted it until its charter expired in 1836. Jackson fought  against the bank throughout his presidency, proclaiming it to be an  unconstitutional extension of the federal government and a tool that rich  capitalists used to corrupt American society.


  Second Continental Congress


  Convened in May 1775 after fighting broke out in Massachusetts between the  British and the colonists. Most delegates opposed the drastic move toward  complete independence from Britain. In an effort to reach a reconciliation, the  Congress sent the Olive Branch Petition to King George III, offering peace under  the conditions that there be a cease-fire in Boston, that the Coercive Acts  (part of the Intolerable Acts) be repealed, and that negotiations between the  colonists and Britain begin immediately. When King George III rejected the  petition, the Congress created the Continental Army and elected George  Washington its commander in chief.


  Second Great Awakening


  Emerged in the early 1800s as part of a backlash against America’s growing  secularism and rationalism. A wave of religious revivals spread throughout the  nation, giving rise to a number of new (largely Protestant) denominations during  the second quarter of the nineteenth century. Revivalist ministers often  stressed self-determination and individual empowerment.


  Second New Deal


  Created in 1935 after FDR’s first New Deal began to crumble in the face of  opposition and antagonistic Supreme Court rulings. The Second New Deal was  characterized by greater government spending and increased numbers of work  relief programs. The most lasting measure of the Second New Deal was the  creation of the Social Security system.


  Sedition Amendment


  Passed in 1918 as an amendment to the Espionage Act. The Sedition Amendment  provided for the punishment of anyone using “disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or  abusive language” in regard to the U.S. government, flag, or military.


  Selective Service Act


  Instituted a draft to build up U.S. military forces. Passed in May 1917,  the act required all men aged 21 to 30 to register for military duty.


  Selective Service and Training Act


  Called for the nation’s first peacetime draft. The act was passed in  September 1940.


  Seneca Falls Convention


  Organized by Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton in 1848. The Seneca  Falls Convention issued a Declaration of Sentiments, modeled on the Declaration  of Independence, declaring that all men and women were created equal.


  Separatists


  English Protestants who would not offer allegiance in any form to the  Church of England. One Separatist group, the Pilgrims, founded Plymouth  Plantation and went on to found other settlements in New England. Other notable  Separatist groups included the Quakers and Baptists.


  Seventeenth Amendment


  Ratified in 1913. The Seventeenth Amendment provided for the direct  election of U.S. senators rather than their selection by state legislatures.


  Sexual revolution


  Refers to the easing of sexual taboos in some segments of society during  the 1920s. Female sexuality and fashion were celebrated, divorce laws were  relaxed in many states, and casual dating became more common.


  Sharecropping system


  Replaced the plantation system after the Civil War as the primary method of  agricultural production in the South. Sharecropping consisted of plantations,  subdivided into small farms, that were rented to freedmen for leases paid in the  form of a share (usually half) of the crop produced. The system gave freedmen a  measure of independence but also ensured that whites maintained control of the  land.#p#SAT2美国历史词汇表:S(2)#e#


  Shays’s Rebellion


  In August 1786, western Massachusetts farmers, led by Daniel Shays,  violently tried to shut down three county courthouses in order to prevent  foreclosure proceedings. The rebellion was easily put down, but it alerted many  government officials to the weaknesses of the nation under the Articles of  Confederation.


  Sherman Antitrust Act


  Passed in 1890 with the intention of breaking up business monopolies. The  act outlawed “every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or  conspiracy in the restraint of trade.” The Sherman Antitrust Act was largely  used to break up union strikes in the 1890s. It was not until the early 1900s  that the government launched an aggressive antitrust campaign.


  Sherman’s March to the Sea


  During the Civil War, Union general William T. Sherman led his forces on a  march from Atlanta to Savannah and then to Richmond. Sherman brought the South  “to its knees” by ordering large-scale destruction.


  Shoot-on-sight order


  Issued in 1941 in response to German submarine attacks on American ships in  the Atlantic ocean. The order authorized naval patrols to fire on any Axis ships  found between the U.S. and Iceland.


  Silent majority


  A term coined by Richard Nixon during the 1968 presidential campaign.  According to Nixon, he represented the “silent majority”—Americans tired of  chaos, student protests, and civil rights agitation and eager for a conservative  federal government.


  Silent Spring


  Written by Rachel Carson and published in 1962. Silent Spring exposed the  environmental hazards of the pesticide DDT. Carson’s book helped spur an  increase in environmental awareness and concern among the American people.


  Upton Sinclair


  A famous muckraker who published The Jungle in 1906. Sinclair’s novel  exposed the unsanitary conditions in several meatpacking plants. It and other  exposés led to the passage of laws designed to ensure the safety of foods and  medicines.


  Sixteenth Amendment


  Ratified in 1913. The Sixteenth Amendment allowed the federal government to  collect a direct income tax. Shortly thereafter, Congress instituted a graduated  income tax with an upper tax rate of 7 percent.


  Smith Act


  Passed in 1940. The act made it illegal to speak of, or advocate,  overthrowing the U.S. government. During the presidential campaign of 1948,  Truman demonstrated his aggressive stance against communism by prosecuting  eleven leaders of the Communist Party under the Smith Act.


  John Smith


  Saved the Jamestown colony from collapse in 1608, its first year of  existence. Smith’s initiatives improved sanitation, hygiene, and organized work  gangs to gather food and build shelters, thereby dramatically lowering the  mortality rates among Jamestown colonists.


  Smith-Connolly War Labor Disputes Act


  Passed in 1930. The act limited the right to strike in key industries and  authorized the president to intervene in any strike, eroding the generally  amiable relationship between the government and organized labor during World War  II.


  Smoot-Hawley Tariff


  One of Herbert Hoover’s early efforts to protect the nation’s farmers  following the onset of the Great Depression. Unfortunately, the tariff raised  rates to an all-time high, hurting farmers more than it helped them. Ninety-four  percent of the imports taxed were agricultural imports.


  Social Darwinism


  Darwin’s theories of evolution and survival of the fittest as applied to  human societies. Andrew Carnegie and others cited social Darwinist theories to  justify the widening gap between the rich and the poor during the era of  industrialization.


  Social Security


  Established by the Social Security Act of August 1935. Social Security  provides benefits to the elderly and disabled. These benefits are subsidized by  income tax withholdings.


  Sons of Liberty


  A group of colonists who led opposition to the Stamp Act.


  Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)


  Founded in 1957 by Martin Luther King Jr. and other prominent clergymen.  The SCLC fought against segregation using nonviolent means.


  Spanish-American War


  Broke out in 1898 over U.S. concerns for the Cuban independence movement.  The U.S. decisively won the war, gaining the territories of Puerto Rico, Guam,  and the Philippines, and securing independence for Cuba. The victory also marked  the entrance of the United States as a powerful force onto the world stage.


  Speakeasies


  Hidden bars during the Prohibition Era that offered live jazz music and  hard liquor. Speakeasies were often run by organized crime rings.


  Specie Circular


  A 1836 executive order issued by President Jackson in an attempt to  stabilize the economy, which had been dramatically expanding since the early  1830s due to state banks’ excessive lending practices and over-speculation. The  Specie Circular required that all land payments be made in gold and silver  rather than in paper money or credit. It precipitated an economic depression  known as the panic of 1837.


  Spheres of influence


  A group of nations or territories in the unofficial economic, political,  and social orbit of a greater power. NATO countries were in the U.S. sphere of  influence, while the Communist countries of the Warsaw Pact were in the USSR’s  sphere of influence. The term is also used to describe European and Russian  influence in China at the end of the nineteenth century, when certain countries  had exclusive trade and development rights in key Chinese ports and regions.#p#SAT2美国历史词汇表:S(2)#e#


  Spoils system


  Provided for the removal and replacement of high-ranking officials from the  previous president’s term with loyal members of the winning party. Andrew  Jackson was one of the first presidents to use the spoils system extensively,  claiming it was necessary to liberty. Based on the adage “to the victor go the  spoils.”


  Sputnik


  The first artificial satellite to orbit the earth, launched by the USSR on  October 4, 1957. The launch prompted the space race between the U.S. and  USSR—Americans were jealous of Soviet technological skill and afraid that the  same rockets that launched Sputnik could be used to deliver nuclear warheads  anywhere on the globe.


  Square Deal


  The name Theodore Roosevelt gave to his social policies, especially his  intended relationships with capital and labor. Roosevelt wanted to treat  everyone fairly, and, in particular, eliminate government favors to big  business.


  Joseph Stalin


  Dictator of the Soviet Union from 1928 until 1953. Stalin coordinated  Soviet involvement in World War II, intitially cooperating with U.S. forces. The  relationship between the USSR and the U.S. soured during World War II,  eventually leading to the Cold War.


  Stamp Act


  Issued by England in 1765. The Stamp Act required colonial Americans to buy  special watermarked paper for newspapers and all legal documents. Violators  faced juryless trials in vice-admiralty courts, as under the 1764 Sugar Act. The  Stamp Act provoked the first organized response to British impositions.


  Stamp Act Congress


  Representatives of nine colonial assemblies met in New York City in October  1765 in anger over the Stamp Act. The colonies agreed that Parliament could not  tax anyone outside of Great Britain and could not deny anyone a fair trial, both  of which had been dictates of the Stamp Act. The meeting marked a new level of  colonial political organization.


  Elizabeth Cady Stanton


  A prominent advocate of women’s rights. Stanton organized the 1848 Seneca  Falls Convention with Lucretia Mott.


  John Steinbeck


  Major American author in the 1930s. Steinbeck’s novels depict simple, rural  lives. His most famous work is The Grapes of Wrath (1939).


  Thaddeus Stevens


  The leader of the Radical Republicans in Congress. Thaddeus Stevens was a  gifted orator and an outspoken legislator devoted to stringent and punitive  Reconstruction. Stevens worked toward social and political equality for Southern  blacks.


  Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT)


  Signed in May 1972 by President Nixon. SALT I limited each of the  superpowers to 200 antiballistic missiles and set quotas for intercontinental  and submarine missiles.


  Strict constructionists


  Favored a strict reading of the Constitution, especially of the “elastic  clause,” in order to limit the powers of the central government. Led by Thomas  Jefferson, strict constructionists comprised the ideological core of the  Republican Party.


  Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)


  Created in 1962. SDS united college students throughout the country in a  network committed to achieving racial equality, alleviating poverty, and ending  the Vietnam War.


  Suez Canal


  North-south waterway in Egypt that connects the Mediterranean and the Red  Seas. In 1956, the Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser tried to nationalize  the canal, which had been owned by British and French interests. In response,  Britain, France, and Israel invaded Egypt. The U.S., United Nations, and USSR  condemned the intervention and pressured the forces to withdraw in November  1956.


  Suffolk Resolves


  Declared that the colonies need not obey the 1773 Coercive Acts, since they  infringed upon basic liberties. The Suffolk Resolves were endorsed by the First  Continental Congress.


  Sugar Act


  1764 British law which lowered the duty on foreign-produced molasses as an  attempt to discourage colonial smuggling. The Sugar Act further stipulated that  Americans could export many commodities—including lumber, iron, skins, and  whalebone—to foreign countries only if the goods passed through British ports  first. The terms of the act and its methods of enforcement outraged many  colonists.


  Charles Sumner


  The leading Radical Republican senator throughout the Civil War and  Reconstruction. Sumner argued ardently for civil rights for blacks. He later led  the defection of the Liberal Republicans from the Republican Party.


  Sussex Pledge


  Issued in 1916 by Germany after the U.S. threatened to break off diplomatic  relations with Germany following a German U-boat attack against the French ship  Sussex, which carried U.S. civilians. Germany pledged not to attack merchant  ships without warning, temporarily easing the diplomatic tension between the  U.S. and Germany.


  以上就是小编整理的SAT2美国历史词汇的S部分,希望对大家的备考有所帮助!


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