A) The delegates thought rights should be guaranteed to the states,not to individual citizens.
B) The delegates thought that the federal government was already limited to its expressed powers,so a bill of rights was unnecessary.
C) The rights of citizens were a secondary concern to the delegates' personal self-interest.
D) A bill of rights would have required granting equal rights to women,which the delegates found to be politically unsavory.
E) They considered a bill of rights unnecessary in the U.S.Constitution since the United Nations' "Universal Declaration of Human Rights" already guaranteed a full set of political rights.
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Multiple Choice
A) bicameralism
B) bilateralism
C) binary legislativism
D) bifurcated representation
E) institutional dualism
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Multiple Choice
A) the House and Senate by two-thirds vote and then ratified by a majority vote of the legislatures of three-fourths of the states
B) the House and Senate by two-thirds vote and then ratified by conventions that called for the purpose in three-fourths of the states
C) a national convention called by Congress in response to petitions by two-thirds of the states and ratified by a majority vote of the legislatures of three-fourths of the states
D) a national convention called by Congress in response to petitions by two-thirds of the states and ratified by conventions called for the purpose in three-fourths of the states
E) a national popular vote on amendments proposed by Congress
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Vermont
B) Delaware
C) Rhode Island
D) Massachusetts
E) Georgia
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Multiple Choice
A) judicial branch
B) executive branch
C) legislative branch
D) role of state governments
E) freedom of speech,religion,and press
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Multiple Choice
A) Virginia Plan
B) Brunswick Plan
C) Connecticut Plan
D) Massachusetts Plan
E) New Jersey Plan
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Multiple Choice
A) Great Compromise
B) Virginia Plan
C) Three-Fifths Compromise
D) Seventh Amendment
E) Franklin Proviso
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Multiple Choice
A) Boston Plan
B) Philadelphia Plan
C) Great Compromise
D) Three-fifths Compromise
E) Jefferson Compromise
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Multiple Choice
A) Senate
B) judiciary
C) bureaucracy
D) House of Representatives
E) Electoral College
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Short Answer
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Shays's Rebellion
B) the Boston Massacre
C) the Boston Tea Party
D) the hanging in effigy of the tax man
E) the assassination of Elbridge Gerry,governor of Massachusetts
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Multiple Choice
A) open up western territories for expansion
B) prevent foreclosures on farm lands
C) release certain British loyalists from captivity as prisoners of war
D) receive full military pensions for service in the Revolutionary War
E) destroy excess supplies of wheat and corn,thereby increasing the market price for these commodities
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) the citizen must serve the state
B) power must be used to balance power
C) the accused are innocent until proven guilty
D) national powers must be delegated to the states
E) absolute power corrupts absolutely
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Multiple Choice
A) slaves just as nonslaves for purposes of representation
B) every five slaves as three people for purposes of representation
C) every four slaves as three people for purposes of representation
D) every two slaves as one person for purposes of representation
E) every slave as one person for allocation of block grants but prohibiting voting by slaves
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) First Colonial Convention
B) Grand Conclave
C) Boston Confederated Congress
D) Philadelphia Constitutional Convention
E) First Continental Congress
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Multiple Choice
A) disagreement over slavery
B) western boundary disputes
C) a lack of common currency
D) British tax and trade policies
E) an inability to bridge their language barriers
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