| A | B |
| Laissez-faire | A policy or attitude of letting things take their own course, without interfering. |
| New Deal | Economic program implemented by President (FDR). |
| Women's Suffrage | The right of women to vote |
| Prohibition | Period of time when there was a ban of alcohol |
| Speakeasies | Popular but illegal liquor-serving bars where you had to give a password to enter |
| Isolationism | The United States decided to pull back from involvement in outside economics or politics |
| Hands Off Attitude | The government policies of the 1920's supported the "hands off" attitude to the US economy. |
| Herbert Hoover | A 1920s president who believed in Laissez-Faire policies or a "hands off" approach to managing the US economy. |
| Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) | Founded policies such as the New Deal and Social Security. |
| Al Capone | A crime leader from the 1920s who committed crimes and broke the laws of prohibition. |
| 18th Amendment | Ban alcohol |
| 19th Amendment | Women can vote |