Judge who supported limiting of free speech during wartime
Oliver Wendell Holmes or Woodrow Wilson
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Every country wanted to have the biggest military. A cause of World War 1
Militarism
German submarines
U-Boats
Treaty that ended World War 1
Treaty of Versailles
American passenger ship that was sunk by a German submarine
Lusitania
American general in World War 1
Kaiser Wilhelm or John Pershing
John Pershing
one side in World War I: Great Britain, France, and Russia, later joined by the U.S.
Allies
Fighting style where soldiers dug holes in the ground as cover
Trench Warfare
1918 law that made criticizing the war illegal
Sedition Act
The government sold these to the people to pay for the war
Bonds
Leader of Austria-Hungary. His assassination started World War 1
Woodrow Wilson or Archduke Ferdinand
Archduke Ferdinand
When one country takes over another country. A cause of World War 1
Imperialism
Armies would spray each other with poisonous mustard gas. Outlawed after the war ended.
Gas warfare
Telegram from Germany asking Mexico for an alliance against the US. Americans learned about this and got angry.
Zimmerman Telegram
one side in World War 1; Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Ottoman Empire
Central Powers
The leader of Germany during World War 1
Kaiser Wilhelm or Adolf Hitler
Kaiser Wilhelm
The belief that your country is better than every other country. A cause of World War 1
Nationalism
Spying
Espionage
2 bonus points on any test you want if you get this right:
Define "animalism" as it is used in Animal Farm.
Animalism is a communist philosophy of all of the animals being treated equal and sharing equally in both the responsibilities and rewards of the farm.
When there weren't enough soldiers, the government would randomly pick men over 18 to join the army
Draft
US President during World War 1
Woodrow Wilson or Teddy Roosevelt
Woodrow Wilson
Answer this question for 2 bonus points on any test you want:
If you reflected this point over the y-axis, what would your new coordinates be?
(7,-8)
(-7, -8)
Biased information that promotes a particular point of view
Propoganda
When the losing side of a war pays money to the winning side
Reparations
Americans helped the war effort at home by buying bonds and working in factories
Homefront