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Constitution Vocabulary - Advanced

AB
confederation or confederacygroup of individuals or states that band together for a common purpose
ratification,ratifiedfinal approval
reserved powersthe powers the Constitution gives the states
concurrent powerspowers given both the state and national governments
enumerated powerspowers of the federal gov't listed in the Const.
elastic clauseArt I sec. 8 or the "necessary and proper clause
checks and balancessystem where each branch can limit the powers of the other branches
separation of powersthe division of gov't power into 3 separate powers
popular sovereigntythe idea that people should rule themselves
anti-federaliststhose who opposed ratification of the Const.
federalistthose who favored the Const.
Federalismsystem in which power is shared between the state and federal gov'ts
assemblythe rt. in the 1sr amend. to bring a group of people together for a meeting
implied powerspowers of congress not specifically listed
three-fifths rule3/5 of the slave population would be counted in determining representation in Congress befor the Civil War
electoral collegerepresentatives of voters in each state who select the President and Vice President
precedentexample for future courts to follow
cabinetpanel of advisors
impeachmentto take the president to court- if found guilty the president can be removed from office
due processrules used to determine if an individual is guilty of a civil or criminal offense;the rules protect the individual's rights
democracystate in which political power lies with all the people
limited governmentprinciple that there are limits to a government's power and that individuals have rights that governments cannot take away
rule of lawcondition where the laws are clearly stated and apply to everyone equally
consent of the governedgovernment ruling with the approval of the people
John LockeEnglish Philosopher who wrote that we are entitled to Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness
Virginia Declaration of Rightspart of Virginia's first constitution in 1776. Its author was George Mason
charterformal document in which someone usually the monarch grants special rights to an institution such as a town or company
popular sovereigntythe people are the source of political power
monarchygovernment by a King or Queen
Virginia Statute for Religious Freedomlaws written by Thomas Jefferson in 1786 that gave Virginians the freedom to practice their religion as they wished
natural rightsrights based on reason,religion, and nature
Preamble to the Constitutionintroductory statement explaining the purpose of the document that follows

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