the beginning
the ideas
the breakdown
the people
the additions
100

a set of basic principles that determines the powers and duties of a government

Constitution

100

the plan for government proposed at the Constitutional Convention in which the national government would have supreme power and a legislative branch would have two houses with representation determined by state population

Virginia Plan

100

the division of the government that proposes bills and passes them into laws

Legislative branch

100

this group makes up the Legislative Branch

the Congress or The Senate & The House of Representatives

100

the first 10 amendments to the Constitution; ratified in 1791

Bill of Rights

200

the document that created the first central government for the United States; was replaced by the Constitution in 1789

Articles of Confederation

200

a proposal to create a unicameral legislature with equal representation of states rather than representation by population; rejected at the Constitutional Convention

New Jersey Plan

200

the division of the federal government that includes the president and the administrative departments; enforces the nation’s laws

Executive branch

200

these people make up the executive branch

the President, Vice President and the Cabinet

200

an official change, correction, or addition to a law or constitution

Amendments

300

a meeting held in Philadelphia at which delegates from the states wrote the Constitution

Constitutional Convention

300

an agreement worked out at the Constitutional Convention establishing that a state’s population would determine representation in the lower house of the legislature, while each state would have equal representation in the upper house of the legislature

The Great Compromise

300

the division of the federal government that is made up of the national courts; interprets laws, punishes criminals, and settles disputes between states

Judicial branch

300

this group makes up the judicial branch

The Court System / the Supreme Court

300

this many amendments are in the Bill of Rights

10

400

American statesman, he was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention, the fourth president of the United States, the author of some of the Federalist Papers, and is called the "father of the Constitution"

James Madison

400

an agreement worked out at the Constitutional Convention stating that only three-fifths of the slaves in a state would count when determining a state’s population for representation in the lower house of Congress

Three-Fifths Compromise

400

a system established by the Constitution that prevents any branch of government from becoming too powerful

checks and balances

400

people who supported ratification of the Constitution

Federalists

400

there are this many amendments in total right now

27

500

The Constitution was written in this year. 

1787

500

voting rights

suffrage

500

U.S. system of government in which power is distributed between a central government and individual states

Federalism

500

people who opposed ratification of the Constitution

Anti-Federalists

500

The Constitution is also known as ... 

The Law of The Land

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