sociology
Across
- 3. the view that the human-made heritage is one of the most important influences in human life, that it lifts humans above the animals, permitting each generation to begin where the previous generation left off
- 6. the human-made environment, which includes both material and nonmaterial traits, both tools and customs
- 8. the intangible part of civilization, such as laws, customs, and folkways
- 9. ways of doing things that have become group-wide practices. develop into mores
- 11. the simplest unit of culture. May be material or nonmaterial
- 12. any area or region which is characterized by one particular civilization or culture
- 14. the values and norms which give the culture of an area its uniqueness
- 16. people who have not yet developed a written language, sometimes called primitive peoples or preliterates
- 17. the feeling that one's own culture is the best and only significant one
- 19. process of absorbing one's native culture. sometimes used interchangeably with socialization
Down
- 1. the obvious, tangible environment of human-made objects
- 2. a group of people forming an isolated culture group within a larger culture, like the immigrant colonies in our cities-chinatown, little italy, etc
- 4. a group of related culture traits clustering around a central culture trait
- 5. isolating; setting apart; as applied to racial adjustment, the setting apart of one group from another- for example, making blacks live in a certain part of a city and ride in different railway coaches
- 7. one straddling two cultures, the one into which he or she was born and the one into which he or she migrates
- 10. unique cultures within the main culture
- 13. joining of groups or individuals from different cultures into one group with a common culture and cultural identity. Also the one-way merger of an individual into a new group through the acquisition of new culture elements
- 15. in sociology, the customary standard of behavior of any given group, that which is socially accepted as the normal pattern of conduct
- 18. the process of acquiring the culture of an area other than that of one's birth and rearing