| A | B |
| propaganda | Information that is spread for the purpose of promoting a cause. |
| Winston Churchill | Prime Minister of England during WWII |
| appeasement | To give in to the demands of a country |
| dictator | An absolute ruler who is harsh and oppressive. |
| troops | A group of soldiers |
| draft | Recruit or force a person to serve in armed forces. |
| Kamikaze | Japanese soldier who committed suicide by crashing his plane into an enemy target during World War II. |
| rationing | To restrict consumption of something that is in short supply. |
| war bond | A bond sold by the government to raise money for the war. |
| blitz | All out intense attack |
| Americans never quit | General Douglas MacArthur said this |
| Hitler | Germany dictator |
| Mussolini | Italy dictator |
| Hirohito | Japanese Emperor |
| Kristallnacht | "The Night of Broken Glass" Nazis attack Jewish homes |
| Pearl Harbor | Where Japan attacked the US on Dec 7, 1941 |
| Douglas MacArthur | Famous general of WWII |
| anti-semitism | Racial prejudice against the Jewish population |
| bunker | A protective dugout, set below the ground, with overhead protection, and small openings for weapons to be fired from. |
| paratrooper | An army soldier trained to land in a combat area by parachuting from an |
| Panzer | German armored (Tank) Unit. |
| D-Day | The day on which the Allied forced invaded France during World War II (June 6, 1944). |
| United Nations | An international organization composed of most of the countries in the world. It was founded in 1945 to promote peace, security, and economic |
| partition | To divide into parts, pieces, or sections. |
| protest | A formal declaration of disapproval or objection by an individual, group or |
| conform | To be obedient |