American Culture
American Values
Religious Heritage
Vocabulary
Mixed Category
100

From where were the people who shaped the values and traditions that became the dominant,
traditional culture of the U.S?

Northern Europe, the majority from England
100

Early settlers came to the North American continent and established colonies because they wanted to be free from....

the power of kings, priests, and noblemen

100

Most Americans are this religion

Protestant 
100

to be different or to become different or change

vary

100

Why are most Americans opposed to welfare?

Because of their idea of self-reliance

200

This is the term that Zangwill used to describe the United States.

The "Melting Pot"

200

There are no titles of nobility in the United States because...

They are forbidden by the Constitution

200

The belief in hard work and self-discipline 

in pursuit of material gain and other goals 

is often referred to as...

The Protestant or Puritan work ethic

200

 a guess that you make based on the information you have about the size, amount, etc., of something

estimate

200

What is the American concept of "fair play?"

the race for success is a fair 

one and that a person does not win just 

because he or she was born into a wealthy 

family, or lose because of race or religion. 

300

By the late 1900s, more than 90% of all immigrants came from these three places.

Latin America, Caribbean, and Asia

300

The 3 traditional values and the price to be paid for each of them: 

Individual freedom vs. self-reliance

Material wealth vs. hard work

Equality of opportunity vs. competition

300

Every individual was solely responsible for his or her own relationship with God.

Priesthood of all believers

300

Not supporting either side of an argument

neutral

300

 Protestant leaders viewed the work of all people as: 

holy

400

The principle that people of different races, religions, and political beliefs can live together peacefully in the same society. 

Cultural Pluralism

400

What Americans mean by freedom.

The desire and the right of all individuals to control their own destiny without outside interference from the government, the church, or a ruling class.

400

The most dramatic example of the idea of self-improvement is...

"Being born again."

400

 an idea or theory that is not proven but that leads to further study or discussion

a hypothesis

400

Why has material success been accepted as a measure of social status in the United States?

Because Americans rejected the 

European system of hereditary aristocracy 

and titles of nobility, they had to find a 

substitute for judging social status.

500

In spite of all its diversity, this is a tie that binds Americans together.

a sense of national identity

500

This became the slogan for the "American Dream"

Going from rags to riches.

500

Many scholars believe that the emphasis 

on these two values made an important 

contribution to the industrial growth 

of the United States.

hard work and self-discipline.

500

to become or to cause (something) to become less in size, importance,

diminish

500

Who said:  

"Culture hides much more than it reveals, and strangely enough what it hides, it hides most effectively from its own participants. Years of study have convinced me that the real job is not to understand foreign culture but to understand our own."

Edward T. Hall