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Vocabulary Crossword

Across
To take back, or to cancel, a law.
A country governed by elected representatives.
To reject a proposed law or bill.
A formal, written request (noun)
The “Age of Reason” in 17th and 18th century Europe.
African Americans who had been set free from slavery.
To formally approve a plan or an agreement. The process of approval is called ratification.
The lawmaking part of government, called the legislature.
Laws that control the way goods, food, and drugs are produced and sold to the public.
The policy of extending a nation’s power by gaining political and economic control over other countries.
To formally accuse an official of a crime related to official duties.
Crops, such as tobacco, sugar, and cotton, raised in large quantities in order to be sold for profit.
Having two lawmaking parts. The word comes from the Latin words meaning “two rooms.”
A written plan that provides the basic framework of a government.
Down
A change to the constitution.
The right to vote.
The constitutional system that shares power between the national and state governments.
To refuse to buy one or more goods from a certain source. Also an organized refusal by many people.
The unjust use of government power. A ruler who uses power in this way is called a tyrant.
The part of government, consisting of the Supreme Court and lower federal courts, that interprets the laws
A system where citizens elect representatives to make and carry out laws
A large area of privately owned land where crops were grown through the labor of workers, usually slaves, who lived on the land.
A formal listing of the basic rights of citizens.
Professional soldiers who fight for anyone who will pay them.
A proposed law.