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Chapter 4 Barrons

Terms

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Diaspora
People who corne from a common ethnic background but who live in different regions outside of the home of their ethnicity.
Fundamentalism
The strict adherence to a particular doctrine.
Christianity
The world's most widespread religion. Christianity is a monotheistic, universal religion that uses missionaries to expand its members worldwide. The three major categories of Christianity are Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Eastern Orthodox.
Evangelical religions
Religion in which an effort is made to spread a particular belief system.
Indo-European family
Language family including the Germanic and Romance languages that is spoken by about 50% of the world's people.
Local religion
Religions that are spiritually bound to particular regions.
Acculturation
The adoption of cultural traits, such as language, by one group under the influence of another.
Monotheism
The worship of only one god.
Minority
A racial or ethnic group smaller than and differing from the majority race or ethnicity in a particular area or region.
Culture
A total way of life held in common by a group of people, including learned features such as language, ideology, behavior, technology, and government.
Ghetto
A segregated ethnic area within a city.
Cultural geography
The subfield of human geography that looks at how cultures vary over space.
Multicultural
Having to do with many cultures.
Syncretic
Traditions that borrow from both the past and present.
Folk culture
Refers to a constellation of cultural practices that form the sights, smells, sounds, and rituals of everyday existence in the traditional societies in which they developed.
Language group
A set of languages with a relatively recent common origin and many similar characteristics.
Ethnicity
Refers to a group of people who share a common identity.
Buddhism
System of belief that seeks to explain ultimate realities for all people-such as the nature of suffering and the path toward self-realization.
Cultural trait
The specific customs that are part of the everyday life of a particular culture, such as language, religion, ethnicity, social institutions, and aspects of popular culture.
Romance languages
Any of the languages derived from Latin including Italian, Spanish, French, and Romanian.
Polytheism
The worship of more than one god.
Custom
Practices followed by the people of a particular cultural group.
Race
A group of human beings distinguished by physical traits, blood types, genetic code patterns or genetically inherited characteristics.
Denomination
A particular religious group, usually associated with differing Protestant belief systems.
Dialect
Geographically distinct versions of a single language that vary somewhat from the parent form.
Language family
A collection of many languages, all of which came from the same original tongue long ago, that have since evolved different characteristics.
Cultural complex
The group of traits that define a particular culture.
Creole
A pidgin language that evolves to the point at which it becomes the primary language of the people who speak it.
Pilgrimage
A journey to a place of religious importance.
Islam
A monotheistic religion based on the belief that there is one God, Allah, and that Muhammad was Allah's prophet. Islam is based in the ancient city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Muhammad.
Animism
Most prevalent in Africa and the Americas, doctrine in which the world is seen as being infused with spiritual and even supernatural powers.
Artifact
Any item that represents a material aspect of culture ..
Literacy
The ability to read and write.
Ethnic cleansing
The systematic attempt to remove all people of a particular ethnicity from a country or region either by forced migration or genocide.
Global religion
Religion in which members are numerous and widespread and their doctrines might appeal to different people from any region of the globe.
Ecumene
The proportion of the earth inhabited by humans.
Pop culture (or popular culture)
Dynamic culture based in 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; and producing and consuming machine-made goods.
Hinduism
A cohesive and unique society, most prevalent in India, that integrates spiritual beliefs with daily practices and official institutions such as the caste system.
Language extinction
This occurs when a language is no longer in use by any living people. Thousands of languages have become extinct over the eons since language first developed, but the process of language extinction has accelerated greatly during the past 300 years.
Universalizing religion
Religion that seeks to unite people from all over the globe.
Cultural imperialism
The dominance of one culture over another.
Cultural extinction
Obliteration of an entire culture by war, disease, acculturation, or a combination of the three.
Genocide
A premeditated effort to kill everyone from a particular ethnic group.
Pidgin Language
that may develop when two groups of people with different languages meet. The pidgin has some characteristics of each language.
Judaism
The first major monotheistic religion. It is based on a sense of ethnic identity, and its adherents tend to form tight-knit communities wherever they live.
Cultural hearth
Locations on earth's surface where specific cultures first arose.
Caste system
System in India that gives every Indian a particular place in the social hierarchy from birth. Individuals may improve the position they inherit in the caste system in their next life through their actions, or karma. After many lives of good karma, they may be relieved from cycle of life and win their place in heaven.
Ethnic religion
Religion that is identified with a particular ethnic or tribal group and that does not seek new converts.
Official language
Language in which all government business occurs in a country.
Shaman
The single person who takes on the roles of priest, counselor, and physician and acts as a conduit to the supernatural world in a shamanist culture.
Environmental determinism
A doctrine that claims that cultural traits are formed and controlled by environmental conditions.
Sino-Tibetan family
Language area that spreads through most of Southeast Asia and China and is comprised of Chinese, Burmese, Tibetan, Japanese, and Korean.
Lingua franca
An extremely simple language that combines aspects of two or more other, more-complex languages usually used for quick and efficient communication.
Toponym
Place names given to certain features on the land such as settlements, terrain features, and streams.
Tradition
A cohesive collection of customs within a cultural group.
Ethnic neighborhood
An area within a city containing members of the same ethnic background.
Missionary
A person of a particular faith that travels in order to recruit new members into the faith represented.

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