| A | B |
| The 1st Vice-President of the United States of America | John Adams |
| The war the colonies won independence from England. | Revolutionary War |
| Only people able to vote in the colonies | Landowners like farmers |
| The compromise used to determine how to count slaves for representation and taxes | The Three-Fifths Compromise |
| The compromise that proposed to have the House based on population and the Senate on 2 votes for each state | The Connecticut Compromise |
| Key agreements at the beginning of the Constitutional Convention | Limited government, representative government, powers divided among 3 branches |
| How many votes did a state get in the Articles of Confederation? | 1 per state |
| He wrote the Declaration of Independence | Thomas Jefferson |
| The document that originated the idea of limited government | The Magna Carta |
| Collection of essays to persuade people in New York and Virginia | The Federalist Papers |
| The plan that called for a unicameral legislature with each state getting 1 vote | The New Jersey Plan |
| The first central government in colonial history | The Second Continental Congress |
| Arguments for the Anti-Federalists | The Constitution did not have a Bill of Rights, it took important powers away from the states, and they feared a strong national government would take away their rights |
| Enlightment Thinker that explained natural rights, consent of the governed, and rebel against a bad government | John Locke |
| The 1st President of the United States of America | George Washington |
| Presided over the Constitutional Convention | George Washington |
| This was signed on July 4, 1776 | The Declaration of Independence |
| The plan that favored representation in congress be based on population | The Virginia Plan |
| The first 10 admendments | The Bill of Rights |
| 3 Enlightment Thinkers | John Locke, Charles Louis Montesquieu, Jean Jacques Rousseau |
| The government that took the place of the Second Continental Congress | The Articles of Confederation |
| Number of states need to ratify the Constitution | 9 |
| Direct tax pass by King George III | The Stamp Act |
| 1st written plan used in the colonies | The Mayflower Compact |
| What does bicameral mean | 2 chambers |