|
Review of the Civil War |
|
|
Across
|
2 |
to keep or save from ruin or harm |
|
5 |
a deal or bargain |
|
6 |
having the ability to change the opinions or actions of others, persuasive |
|
7 |
destruction or what is left after destruction |
|
8 |
the capital of Georgia |
|
10 |
the belief that one race is superior or inferior to another |
|
16 |
a public announcement, a declaration |
|
17 |
one who believed that slavery should be abolished |
|
18 |
the political use of FEAR to control or influence others |
|
20 |
to get rid of, to eliminate by law |
|
21 |
placed, located |
|
22 |
a system of production, distribution and consumption of goods and services, a system by which wealth is created and distributed. |
|
23 |
a large commercial farm usually dedicated to one or more cash crop |
|
24 |
to withdraw or separate from a larger organization |
|
25 |
freedom, the condition of being free, the process of gaining freedom |
Down
|
1 |
to take, to grab (to take by force) |
|
3 |
to make official or legally valid |
|
4 |
a clash or opposition, a disagreement, an incompatibility |
|
5 |
a tradition, something expected by society, a practice associated with a specific nation, land, or people |
|
9 |
literally "rebuilding", the period of time after the Civil War when Union troops occupied the South |
|
11 |
one of 100 legislators who meet in the upper house of the US Congress |
|
12 |
without mercy or pity, without hesitation or doubt, |
|
13 |
a set of rules and roles that exist independently of any group of individuals, an organization or tradition that has existed for a long time |
|
14 |
a navel action where ships are prevented from entering or leaving ports, an act of war where a nation state is cut off from ocean born commerce |
|
15 |
animal like, relying on strength rather than intelligence or persuasion |
|
19 |
to deliberately cause anger |
