Unit 3 Vocabulary Word Scramble

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 
 
 
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AcculturationThe process by which an ethnic group changes in order to function in the host society. / Cultural modifications or change that results when one culture group or individual adopts traits of a dominant or host society; cultural development or change through
AssimilationThe loss of all ethnic traits and complete blending into the host society./A two-part behavioral and structural process by which a minority population reduces or loses completely its identifying cultural characteristics and blends into the host society.
Cultural adaptationThe concept, central to cultural ecology, that culture is the uniquely human method of meeting physical environmental challenges -- that culture is an adaptive system.
Cultural core/periphery pattern(blank)
Cultural EcologyBroadly defined, the study of the relationships between the physical environment and culture; narrowly (and more commonly) defined, the study of culture as an adaptive system serving to facilitate human adaptation to nature and environmental change.
Cultural identity(blank)
Cultural Landscapethe artificial landscape; the visible human imprint on the land. The natural landscape as modified by human activities and bearing the imprint of a culture group or society, the built environment.
Cultural Realm(blank)
CultureA total way of life held in common by a group of people, including such learned features as speech, ideology, behavior, livelihood, technology, and government./
Culture RegionAn area occupied by people who have something in common culturally; or a spatial unit that functions politically, socially, or economically as a distinct entity./A formal or functional region within which common cultural characteristics prevail. It may b
Formal-- core, periphery(blank)
Functional--nodeA region differentiated by what occurs within it rather than by a homogeneity of physical or cultural phenomena; an earth area recognized as an operational unit based upon defined organizational criteria. The concept of unit is based on interaction and i
Vernacular (perceptual)--regional self-awarenessA region perceived to exist by its inhabitants; based in the collective spatial perception of the population at large; bearing a generally accepted name or nickname./A region perceived and defined by its inhabitants, usually with a popularly given or acce
Expansion DiffusionThe spread of innovations within an area in a snowballing process, so that the total number of knowers become greater and the area of occurrence grows./The spread of ideas, behaviors, or articles through a culture area or from one culture to neighboring a
Relocation DiffusionThe spread of an innovation or other element of culture that occurs with the bodily relocation (migration) of an individual or group that has the idea./The transfer of ideas, behaviors, or articles from one place to another through the migration of those
Innovation adoption(blank)
Maladaptive diffusionbad adapatations diffuse
Sequent occupance(blank)
Adaptive StrategiesThe unique way each culture utilizes its particular physical environment; those aspects of culture that serve to provide the necessities of life -- food, clothing, shelter, and the defense.
Anglo-American LandscapeEngland type landscape
characteristics(blank)
Architectural formhow people build buildings based on their culture
Built environmentThat part of the physical landscape that represents material culture; the buildings, roads, bridges, and similar structures large and small of the cultural landscape.
Folk cultureA small, cohesive, stable, isolated, nearly self-sufficient group that is homogeneous in custom and race; characterized by a strong family or clan structure; order maintained through sanctions based in the religion or family; little division of labor othe
Folk food(blank)
Folk house(blank)
Folk songs(blank)
FolkloreNonmaterial folk culture; the teachings and wisdom of a folk group; the traditional tales, sayings, beliefs, and superstitions that are transmitted orally./Oral traditions of folk culture, including talks, fables, legends, customary observations, and mora
Material CultureAll physical, material objects made and used by members of a cultural group, such as clothing, buildings, tools and utensils, instruments, furniture, and artwork; the visible aspect of culture./
Nonmaterial cultureIncludes the oral aspect of a culture, such as songs, dialect, tales, beliefs, and customs./The oral traditional, songs, and stories of a culture group along with its beliefs and customary behaviors.
Popular cultureA dynamic culture based on large, heterogeneous societies permitting considerable individualism, innovation, and change; having a money-based economy, division of labor into professions, secular institutions of control, and weak interpersonal ties; produc
Survey systems(blank)
Traditional Architecture(blank)
CreoleA language developed from a pidgin to become the native tongue of a society.
DialectA distinctive local or regional variant of a language that remains mutually intelligible to speakers of other dialects of that language; a subtype of a language./
Indo-European Languages(blank)
IsoglossThe border of usage of an individual word or pronunciation./A mapped boundary line marking the limits of a particular linguistic feature.
LanguageA distinctive form of speech that is not mutually intelligible to the speakers of other languages./The system of words, their pronunciation, and methods of combination used and mutually understood by a community of individuals.
Language familyA group of related languages derived from a common ancestor./A group of languages thought to have descended from a singe, common ancestral language.
Language Group(blank)
Language subfamily(blank)
Lingua francaAn existing, well-established language used widely where it is not a mother tongue, for the purposes of government, trade, business, and other contacts among persons./
Linguistic diversity(blank)
Monolingual/multilingual(blank)
Official Language/A governmentally designated language of instruction, of government, of the courts, and other official public and private communication.
PidginA composite language consisting of a small vocabulary borrowed from the linguistic groups involved in international commerce./
ToponymyThe place names of a region or, especially, the study of place names.
Trade LanguageLingua Franca
AnimismThe belief that inanimate objects, such as trees, rocks, and rivers, possess souls./A belief that natural objects may be the abode of dead people, spirits, or gods who occasionally give the objects the appearance of life.
BuddhismThe religion represented by the many groups, especially numerous in Asia, that profess varying forms of this doctrine and that venerate Buddha.
Cargo cult pilgrimageworship of cargo
ChristianityA monotheistic, universalizing religion based on the teachings of Jesus Christ and of the Bible as sacred scripture.
ConfucianismA map projection employing a cone placed tangent or secant to the globe as the presumed developable surface.
Ethinic religionA religion identified with a particular ethnic or tribal group; does not seek converts./A religion identified with a particular ethnic group and largely exclusive to it. Such a religion does not seek converts.
Exclave/ enclaveA piece of a country separated from the main body of it by the intervening territory of another country./A portion of a state that is separated from the main territory and surrounded by another country./A piece of territory surrounded by, but not part of,
Fundamentalism(blank)
Geomancy (feng shui)A traditional East Asian form of environmental perception, also called <<feng-shui>>, by which particular configurations of terrain, compass directions, soil textures, and watercourse patterns become more auspicious than others, influencing the siteing of
HadjMuslim pilgrimage to MECCA
HinduismAn ancient and now dominant value system and religion of India, closely identified with Indian culture but without central creed, single doctrine, or religious organization.
Interfaith boundaries(blank)
IslamA monotheistic, universalizing religion that includes belief in Allah as the sole deity and in Mohammed as his prophet completing the work of earlier prophets of Judaism and Christianity.
Jainismbranch of buddism that doesnt believe in harming anything
JudaismA monotheistic, ethnic religion first developed among the Hebrew people of the ancient Near East; its determining conditions include descent from Israel (Jacob), the Torah (law and scripture), and tradition.
Landscapes of the Deadhow you bury your deade
Monothiem/polytheismThe worship of only one god./The belief that there is but a single God./The worship of many gods. /Belief in or worship of many gods.
MormonismLatter day saints- majority found in Utah.
Muslim pilgrimage(blank)
Muslim population(blank)
Proselytic religionA religion that actively seeks converts and has the goal of converting all humankind.
Reincarnation(blank)
Religion (groups, places)A social system involving a set of beliefs and practices through which people seek harmony with the universe and attempt to influence the forces of nature, life, and death./A personal or institutionalized system of worship and of faith in the sacred and d
Religous architectural styles(blank)
Religious conflict(blank)
Religious culture hearth(blank)
Religious toponym(blank)
Sacred spaceAn area recognized by a religious group as worthy of devotion, loyalty, esteem, or fear, or the extent that it becomes sought out, avoided, inaccessible to the nonbeliever, and/or removed from economic use.
Secularism/A rejection of or indifference to religion and religious practice.
Shamanism/A form of tribal religion based on belief in a hidden world of gods, ancestral spirits, and demons responsive only to a shaman, or interceding priest.
Sharia lawmuslim law / foundation of muslim laws
ShintoismThe polytheistic, ethnic religion of Japan that includes reverence of deities of natural forces and veneration of the emperor as descendent of the sun-goddess.
Sikhismmixes hinduism and islam
Sunni/Shiathe 2 major divisions of islam
TaoismA Chinese value system and ethnic religion emphasizing conformity to Tao (Way), the creative reality ordering the universe.
TheocracyA government guided by a religion.
Universalizing(blank)
Zoroastrianismpersian religion believes in good vs. evil
AcculturationThe process by which an ethnic group changes in order to function in the host society.
Adaptive strategyThe unique way each culture utilizes its particular physical environment; those aspects of culture that serve to provide the necessities of life -- food, clothing, shelter, and the defense.
AssimilationThe loss of all ethnic traits and complete blending into the host society./A two-part behavioral and structural process by which a minority population reduces or loses completely its identifying cultural characteristics and blends into the host society.
Barrio(blank)
Chain migration The tendency of people to migrate along channels, over a period of time from specific source areas to specific destinations./The process by which migration movements from a common home area to a specific destination are sustained by links of friendship o
Cultural adaptationThe concept, central to cultural ecology, that culture is the uniquely human method of meeting physical environmental challenges -- that culture is an adaptive system
Cultural shatterbelt(blank)
Ethnic Cleansing(blank)
Ethnic conflict(blank)
Ethnic enclaveA small area occupied by a distinctive minority culture.
Ethnic groupA group of people sharing common ancestry and cultural tradition living as a minority in a larger society./People sharing a distinctive culture, frequently based on common national origin, religion, language, or race.
Ethnic HomelandA sizeable area inhabited by an ethnic minority exhibiting a strong sense of attachment to the region and often exercising some measure of political and social control over it.
Ethnic Landscape(blank)
Ethnic neighborhoodAn area within a city containing members of the same ethnic background; a voluntary segregation of urban people along ethnic lines.
Ethnicity/Ethnic quality; affiliation with a group whose racial, cultural, religious, or linguistic characteristics or national origins distinguish it from a larger population within which it is found.
ethnocentrism/Conviction of the evident superiority of one's own ethnic group.
GhettoA segregated ethnic area within a city, caused by residential discrimination against the will of the people involved./A forced or voluntary segregated residential area housing a racial, ethnic, or religious minority.
Plural Society(blank)
Race/A subset of human population whose members share certain distinctive, inherited biological characteristics.
Segregation /A measure of the degree to which members of a minority group are not uniformly distributed among the total population.
Social DistanceA measure of the perceived degree of social separation between individuals, ethnic groups, neighborhoods, or other groupings; the voluntary or enforced segregation of two or more distinct social groups for most activities.
Dowry Death(blank)
Enfranchisement(blank)
Gender/In the cultural sense, a reference to socially created -- not biologically based -- distinctions between femininity and masculinity.
Gender gap(blank)
Infanticide(blank)
Longevity gap(blank)
Matenal mortality rate(blank)