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Insurance Vocabulary 16-30 Worksheet - WordMint - Free Printable

Insurance Vocabulary 16-30 Worksheet - WordMint

Educational worksheet: Insurance Vocabulary 16-30 Worksheet - WordMint. Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.

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Show Answer Key & Explanations Step-by-step solution for: Insurance Vocabulary 16-30 Worksheet - WordMint
Let’s go step by step to match each definition (1–15) with the correct term from the list (A–O).

We’ll read each description and think about what it means, then find the best matching term.

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1. pays for the damage to another person’s property. Pays nothing toward your own losses

→ This is about paying for *other people’s* damage — not yours. That’s liability.
Look at G: “Liability auto insurance” → matches perfectly.

1 = G

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2. protects your own car against damage from accidents

→ Accidents = collisions. So this is collision coverage.
B: “Collision car insurance” → yes.

2 = B

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3. covers damage other than collision

→ Not from crashing? Like theft, fire, hail? That’s “comprehensive”.
I: “Comprehensive car insurance” → correct.

3 = I

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4. provides additional insurance coverage when you are involved in an accident with an uninsured/underinsured driver

→ Exactly what D says: “Uninsured/underinsured”

4 = D

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5. is a flat rate you will pay for a specific service

→ In health insurance, that’s called a “co-pay” — like $20 for a doctor visit.
C: “Co-pay” → perfect.

5 = C

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6. protects you in case of illness or injury

→ General protection for sickness or getting hurt → that’s basic health insurance.
H: “Health insurance” → yes.

6 = H

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7. (Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act) Allows you to continue your health insurance for a limited time with your employer after your leave employment

→ The name is COBRA! J: “COBRA” → exact match.

7 = J

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8. The Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act requires that all patients be able to access their own medical records...

→ HIPAA! F: “HIPPA” (note: typo in worksheet — should be HIPAA, but we pick F)

8 = F

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9. If a health care plan covers children, they generally can be added to or kept on a parent's health insurance policy until they turn 26 years old

→ This is part of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). L: “Affordable Care Act”

9 = L

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10. protects your income if you cannot work due to illness or injury

→ That’s disability insurance — replaces your paycheck if you’re too sick/injured to work.
O: “Disability insurance”

10 = O

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11. Hospital Insurance is hospital insurance for people 65+ and/or for people with certain disabilities

→ Medicare Part A covers hospital stays. K: “Medicare—Part A”

11 = K

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12. Supplementary Medical Insurance is non-hospital insurance for people 65+... covers doctors’ visits, ambulances, etc

→ That’s Medicare Part B. M: “Medicare—Part B”

12 = M

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13. Prescription Drug Coverage is a voluntary program for paying for your prescription drugs. If you earn more, you pay more

→ Medicare Part D covers prescriptions. A: “Medicare—Part D”

13 = A

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14. social welfare or protection program is for people with low incomes and limited resources...

→ Medicaid helps poor people afford healthcare. N: “Medicaid”

14 = N

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15. protects you and other drivers against accidents that result in damage and injury. Can also protect you in the event of: • Theft • Vandalism • Natural disasters

→ Wait — this sounds like comprehensive again? But #3 was already comprehensive.

Wait — let’s reread: “protects you AND OTHER DRIVERS” — so liability? But liability doesn’t cover theft/vandalism.

Actually, looking back — maybe this is describing auto insurance in general? E: “Auto insurance” — which includes liability, collision, comprehensive.

But #1 was liability, #2 collision, #3 comprehensive — so #15 might be the umbrella term: Auto Insurance.

Also note: it says “protects you and other drivers” — that’s liability + possibly others. And adds theft/vandalism/disasters — which is comprehensive.

So overall, this is describing full auto insurance coverage.

E: “Auto insurance” → fits as the broad category.

15 = E

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Now let’s double-check we didn’t repeat any letters:

Used: G, B, I, D, C, H, J, F, L, O, K, M, A, N, E → All 15 unique. Good.

Final Answer:
1-G, 2-B, 3-I, 4-D, 5-C, 6-H, 7-J, 8-F, 9-L, 10-O, 11-K, 12-M, 13-A, 14-N, 15-E
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of insurance worksheet.
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