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You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Hockerdy Choose a category. You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question. Click to begin.

Click here for Final Jeopardy Choose a point value. Choose a point value. Click here for Final Jeopardy

Weapons Of WW1 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point Causes of WW1 Weapons Of WW1 Trench Warfare U.S. Involvement U.S. Intervention Alliances 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 10 Point 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 20 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 30 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 40 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points 50 Points

The principal or policy of maintaining a large military establishment

Militarism

A formal agreement or treaty between two or more nations to cooperate for specific purposes.

Alliance

The policy of extending the rule or authority of an empire or nation over foreign countries

Imperialism

Devotion and loyalty to one’s own country; patriotism.

Nationalism

This future heir to the Austria-Hungarian throne was assassinated by Serbian nationalist in June of 1914.

Archduke Franz Ferdinand

Fire power increased to 600 rounds per minute with this type of gun

Machine Guns

A fight between warring fighter planes

“Dogfights”

Floating gas-filled “airships”

Zeppelins

Invented by the British these, self-propelled combat vehicles were armed with cannon and machine guns and moved on a caterpillar tread

Tanks

Invented by the Germans, this yellow-green fog sickened, suffocated, burned and blinded victims

Poison Gas

These entanglements were positioned in the front of the trench and were designed to slow down the enemies ground assult

Barbed Wire

Injury to the skin, blood vessels, and nerves of the feet due to prolonged exposure to cold and wet, common among soldiers serving in trenches

Trench Foot

An area between opposing trenches, over which no control has been established

No Man’s Land

Over 300 miles of trenches were dug along this border

French/German border from NE France down to SE France

These underground rooms were used for officers’ quarters & command posts

“Dugouts”

The year the United States entered the “Great War”

1917

United States President during WW1

Woodrow Wilson

U.S. General in charge of the American Expeditionary Force (AEF)

General John J. Pershing 1860-1948

How many battle deaths did the U.S. suffer as a result of WW1?

120,000

This was a policy that originally kept the United States out of the Great War

Isolationism

Close cultural ties and big business loans, lead the U. S Close cultural ties and big business loans, lead the U.S. to join this side?

Allies

The sinking of this merchant ship, at the hands of the German Navy, cost the lives of 128 Americans

Lusitania 5/7/1915

A message sent in 1917 by the German foreign minister to the German ambassador in Mexico, proposing a German-Mexican alliance

Zimmermann Note

The Germans practiced this effective method on the high seas to stop America from supplying the allies

Unrestricted Submarine Warfare

President Wilson’s campaign slogan in November of 1916

“He kept us Out of War”

Germany, Austria-Hungary & the Ottoman Empire

Central Powers

Great Britain, France and Russia

“Triple Entente”

Great Britain, France and the United States

Allied Powers

Bulgaria

Central Power

Spain

Neutral Country

Final Jeopardy Make your wager

The Acronym M.A.I.N & the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand & his Wife

Long and Short term causes of WW1