Diffusion
Vocabulary
Religions
Languages
More Vocab
100

the spread of a cultural trait by people who migrate and carry their cultural traits with them

Relocation Diffusion

100

composed of the shared practices, technologies, attitudes, and behaviors transmitted by a society.

Culture

100

A monotheistic system of beliefs and practices based on the Old Testament and the teachings of Jesus as embodied in the New Testament and emphasizing the role of Jesus as savior.

Christianity 

100

A collection of languages related to each other through a common ancestor long before recorded history.

Language Family

100

occurs when an ethnic or immigrant group moving to a new area adopts the values and practices of the larger group that has received them, while still maintaining major elements of their own culture

Acculturation 

200

the spread of cultural traits through direct or indirect exchange without migration

Expansion Diffusion

200

Practice routinely followed by a group of people.

Custom

200

A religion with a belief in one god. It originated with Abraham and the Hebrew people. Yahweh was responsible for the world and everything within it. They preserved their early history in the Old Testament.

Judaism

200

A collection of languages related through a common ancestor that existed several thousand years ago. Differences are not as extensive or as old as with language families, and archaeological evidence can confirm that the branches derived from the same family.

Language Branch

200

when an ethnic group can no longer be distinguished from the receiving group

Assimilation 

300

occurs when a cultural traits spreads continuously outward from its hearth through contact among people

Contagious Diffusion

300

A blending of two or more cultural or religious traditions

Syncretism

300

A religion and philosophy developed in ancient India, characterized by a belief in reincarnation and a supreme being who takes many forms

Hinduism

300

A collection of languages within a branch that share a common origin in the relatively recent past and display relatively few differences in grammar and vocabulary.

Language Group

300

Nativism is another term for this

Anti-Immigrant

400

spread of culture outward from the most interconnected places or from centers of wealth and importance

Hierarchical Diffusion

400

area in which a unique culture or a specific trait develops

Hearth

400

the doctrines of a monotheistic religion founded in northern India in the 16th century by Guru Nanak and combining elements of Hinduism and Islam

Sikhism

400

a cultural process where foreign influences are absorbed and integrated with local meanings (a type of syncretism)

Creolization 

400

evaluation of other cultures according to preconceptions originating in the standards and customs of one's own culture.

Ethnocentrism 
500

occurs when people in a culture adopt an underlying idea or process from another culture, but modify it because they reject one trait of it

Stimulus Diffusion

500

behaviors heavily discouraged by a culture

Taboo

500

A religion based on the teachings of the prophet Mohammed which stresses belief in one god (Allah), Paradise and Hell, and a body of law written in the Quran. Followers are called Muslims.

Islam

500

A family of languages consisting of most of the languages of Europe as well as those of Iran, the Indian subcontinent, and other parts of Asia

Indo-European

500

the notion that successive societies leave their cultural imprints on a place, each contributing to the cumulative cultural landscape

Sequent Occupancy

M
e
n
u