| A | B |
| Proclamation Line of 1763 | Protect Native Americans in the west |
| Townshend Acts | Tax on glass, paper, paint, lead, and tea |
| To cancel | Repeal |
| Writs of Assistance | Inspect a ship/home for smuggled goods |
| Tax on Molasses | Sugar Act |
| Tea Act | Helped British East India Company |
| Boycott | Refuse to buy goods |
| Militia | Army of citizen soldiers |
| Written request, signed by people | Petition |
| Coercive Acts | Parliament's response to the Boston Tea Party |
| Stamp Act | Placed taxes on printed materials |
| Colonists' disguises during Boston Tea Party | Native Americans |
| Tea | Not repealed from the Townshend Acts |
| "No taxation without..." | representation |
| Intolerable Acts | Colonists name for the Coercive Acts |
| Purpose of the Tea Act | Save the British East India Company |
| Cause of the British firing shots during Boston Massacre | Angry crowd caused the soldiers to panic |
| Commander of the Continental Army | George Washington |
| Decision of the First Continental Congress | Boycott British goods |
| Started the Committees of Correspondence | Samuel Adams |
| Three main ideas of Dec. of Indep. | Natural rights, British wrongs, Independence |
| Main idea of Dec. of Indep. | Right to life and liberty |
| British purpose in going to Concord | Seize stored weapons |
| Bunker Hill | First official battle of the Revolutionary War |
| Raising of taxes | Pay for the French and Indian War |
| Samuel Adams | "Father of the Revolution" |
| Thomas Jefferson | Author of Dec. of Indep. |
| Ethan Allen | Leader of the Green Mountain Boys |
| Thomas Paine | Author of "Common Sense" |
| Effigies | Rag figures |
| Quartering Act | House British soldiers |
| Preamble | Introduction to Dec. of Indep. |
| Patriots | Wanted war with Britain |
| Propaganda | Influence public opinion |
| Loyalists | Wanted Britain to rule |
| Crispus Attucks | African American killed during the Boston Massacre |
| British monarch that encouraged the Intolerable Acts | George III |
| Paul Revere | Warned colonists about the British |