100 CIVICS QS. (2008 VERSION) - Lesson 6 U.S Citizenship Preparation Class
Join us for Lesson 6 of the U.S Citizenship Preparation Class! This class covers Questions 1-21 of PART 12 of Form N-400 and a civics lesson about the Judicial Branch of Government - including 7 civics test questions, and two reading and writing sentences. Come study with us!!
Supreme Court Justices - https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx
Find your Governor - https://www.usa.gov/state-governor
Part 12 Vocabulary #1, Questions 1-21 VIDEO - https://youtu.be/k-MvfB5Q3xk
VOCABULARY for Part 12, Qs 1-21:
good moral character: having good behavior
claimed: lied and said or wrote that you were a US citizen
registered: filled in a form to put your name on the official list of voters
voted: submitted a ballot to state your choice of a leader or law
hereditary: something you got from one or both of your parents
title: King, Queen, Prince, Princess, etc.
order of nobility: a member of a noble or royal family (for example, a King, Queen, Prince, or Princess)
inherited titles: a royal position you got because you were born into a royal family
declared legally incompetent: when a court says that you are unable to understand because of mental illness or impairment
mental institution: a place where people with serious mental illnesses live and receive treatment
overdue: late in being done
non-U.S. resident: someone who does not live permanently in the U.S.
organization, association, fund, foundation, party, club, society: an organization of people who do the same type of work or are similar in another way (for example a church, temple, senior group, book club, girl scouts, etc.)
Communism: a political/economic system where the government owns all property (for example, the Soviet Union, Cuba, Venezuela, North Korea, China, Vietnam, others).
totalitarian: a political system in which the people have no power and are controlled by the government
terrorist: a person or organization that uses violent means against ordinary people or a government
advocated: suggested, convinced others
overthrow: to remove a leader or government from power by using force
persecuted: treated someone badly and unfairly because of his or her ideas or ethnicity
Nazi: a German political group led by Adolf Hitler in the 1930’s-1940’s
allied with: joined with a group or government
paramilitary unit: a group of people who act like a military group, but who are not part of the official military
vigilante unit: a group of people who act like the police, but are not part of the official police
labor camp: a place where people are forced to work (for example, a concentration camp)
genocide: when many people are killed because of their race, religion, national origin, membership in a group, or political opinion
torture: to cause a great amount of pain in another person without killing them
rebel group: a group of people who are against something, usually a government
guerrilla group: a group of people who use weapons against or otherwise physically attack the military, police, government, or other people
militia: an army of people, not part of the official military
insurgent organization:a group that uses weapons and fights against a government
detention facility: a place where people are forced to stay, a jail or a prison
weapon: a thing that causes bodily harm or damage (for example, a gun, knife, bomb, or rocket)
recruit: to ask someone to join a group or organization
enlist: to sign someone up into a group or organization
conscript: to require/force someone to join a group or organization
combat: active fighting between people and/or groups or armies
IMPORTANT LINKS AND HELPFUL WEBSITES:
OFFICIAL USCIS Website - https://www.uscis.gov/
USCIS Form N-400, Application for Naturalization - https://www.uscis.gov/n-400
DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this video is not legal advice, but general information on issues commonly encountered in immigration. Essa Group is not a law firm and is not a substitute for an attorney or law firm. Please see important links below:
**FOR LEGAL HELP or representation, please see here to check in with a free or low cost local immigration representative - https://www.justice.gov/eoir/list-pro-bono-legal-service-providers and here - https://www.citizenshipworks.org/findlegalhelp
Many community organizations and social service providers offer citizenship classes and assistance with the naturalization process. Please see here for more information - https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship/learners/find-help-your-community
**AVOID SCAMS - The wrong help can hurt! - Don’t become a victim of immigration scams! If you need legal advice on immigration matters, make sure the person helping you is authorized to give legal advice. Only an attorney or an accredited representative working for a Department of Justice (DOJ) recognized organization can give you legal advice - https://www.uscis.gov/avoid-scams/avoid-scams-resource-center
Видео 100 CIVICS QS. (2008 VERSION) - Lesson 6 U.S Citizenship Preparation Class канала Essa Group
Supreme Court Justices - https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx
Find your Governor - https://www.usa.gov/state-governor
Part 12 Vocabulary #1, Questions 1-21 VIDEO - https://youtu.be/k-MvfB5Q3xk
VOCABULARY for Part 12, Qs 1-21:
good moral character: having good behavior
claimed: lied and said or wrote that you were a US citizen
registered: filled in a form to put your name on the official list of voters
voted: submitted a ballot to state your choice of a leader or law
hereditary: something you got from one or both of your parents
title: King, Queen, Prince, Princess, etc.
order of nobility: a member of a noble or royal family (for example, a King, Queen, Prince, or Princess)
inherited titles: a royal position you got because you were born into a royal family
declared legally incompetent: when a court says that you are unable to understand because of mental illness or impairment
mental institution: a place where people with serious mental illnesses live and receive treatment
overdue: late in being done
non-U.S. resident: someone who does not live permanently in the U.S.
organization, association, fund, foundation, party, club, society: an organization of people who do the same type of work or are similar in another way (for example a church, temple, senior group, book club, girl scouts, etc.)
Communism: a political/economic system where the government owns all property (for example, the Soviet Union, Cuba, Venezuela, North Korea, China, Vietnam, others).
totalitarian: a political system in which the people have no power and are controlled by the government
terrorist: a person or organization that uses violent means against ordinary people or a government
advocated: suggested, convinced others
overthrow: to remove a leader or government from power by using force
persecuted: treated someone badly and unfairly because of his or her ideas or ethnicity
Nazi: a German political group led by Adolf Hitler in the 1930’s-1940’s
allied with: joined with a group or government
paramilitary unit: a group of people who act like a military group, but who are not part of the official military
vigilante unit: a group of people who act like the police, but are not part of the official police
labor camp: a place where people are forced to work (for example, a concentration camp)
genocide: when many people are killed because of their race, religion, national origin, membership in a group, or political opinion
torture: to cause a great amount of pain in another person without killing them
rebel group: a group of people who are against something, usually a government
guerrilla group: a group of people who use weapons against or otherwise physically attack the military, police, government, or other people
militia: an army of people, not part of the official military
insurgent organization:a group that uses weapons and fights against a government
detention facility: a place where people are forced to stay, a jail or a prison
weapon: a thing that causes bodily harm or damage (for example, a gun, knife, bomb, or rocket)
recruit: to ask someone to join a group or organization
enlist: to sign someone up into a group or organization
conscript: to require/force someone to join a group or organization
combat: active fighting between people and/or groups or armies
IMPORTANT LINKS AND HELPFUL WEBSITES:
OFFICIAL USCIS Website - https://www.uscis.gov/
USCIS Form N-400, Application for Naturalization - https://www.uscis.gov/n-400
DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this video is not legal advice, but general information on issues commonly encountered in immigration. Essa Group is not a law firm and is not a substitute for an attorney or law firm. Please see important links below:
**FOR LEGAL HELP or representation, please see here to check in with a free or low cost local immigration representative - https://www.justice.gov/eoir/list-pro-bono-legal-service-providers and here - https://www.citizenshipworks.org/findlegalhelp
Many community organizations and social service providers offer citizenship classes and assistance with the naturalization process. Please see here for more information - https://www.uscis.gov/citizenship/learners/find-help-your-community
**AVOID SCAMS - The wrong help can hurt! - Don’t become a victim of immigration scams! If you need legal advice on immigration matters, make sure the person helping you is authorized to give legal advice. Only an attorney or an accredited representative working for a Department of Justice (DOJ) recognized organization can give you legal advice - https://www.uscis.gov/avoid-scams/avoid-scams-resource-center
Видео 100 CIVICS QS. (2008 VERSION) - Lesson 6 U.S Citizenship Preparation Class канала Essa Group
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