| A | B | 
|---|
| George Washington | commander of the Continental Army | 
| mercenary | a professional soldier hired to fight for a foreign country | 
| strategy | an overall plan of action | 
| rendezvous | a meeting | 
| Battle of Saratoga | a series of conflicts between Brittish soldiers and the Continental Army in 1777 that proved to be a turning point in the Revolutionary War | 
| ally | a country that agrees to help another country achieve a common goal | 
| Marquis de Lafayette | French nobleman who volunteered to serve in Washington's army | 
| bayonet | a long steel knife attached to the end of a gun | 
| desert | to leave military duty without intending to return | 
| privateer | a privately owned ship that has government permission during wartime to attack an enemy's merchant ships | 
| James Forten | 14 yr old son of a free African-American sail maker | 
| John Paul Jones | most famous naval officer of the Revolution known by a fake name; won the most famous sea battle | 
| Lord Cornwallis | British general who lead army in South Carolina | 
| guerrillas | a soldier who weakens the enemy with surprise raids and hit-and-run attacks | 
| Battle of Yorktown | the last major battle of the Revolutionary War, which resulted in the surrender of British forces in 1781 | 
| Treaty of Paris of 1783 | the treaty that ended the Revolutionary War, confirming the independence of the United States and setting the boundaries of the United States | 
| republicanism | the belief that government should be based on the consent of the people, people exercise their power by voting for political representation | 
| Elizabeth Freeman | African-American who sued for her freedom in a Massachusetts court and won in 1781 ending slavery in that state | 
| Richard Allen | preacher who helped start the Free African Society |