| A | B |
| recourse | The act or an instance of turning or applying to a person or thing for aid or security |
| succor | Assistance in time of distress; relief. |
| extemporize | improvise |
| extemporaneous | impromptu |
| contemporaneous | Originating, existing, or happening during the same period of time |
| temporize | To act evasively in order to gain time, avoid argument, or postpone a decision |
| indignant | angry due to indignation |
| indignation | anger aroused by something unjust, mean, or unworthy |
| deign | to regard as worthy, appropriate of one's dignity |
| aggregate | Constituting or amounting to a whole |
| egregious | Conspicuously bad or offensive |
| invidious | Tending to rouse ill will |
| interlocutory | Law Pronounced or decided during the course of an action or suit and merely temporary or provisional in nature: an interlocutory decree. |
| loquacious | Very talkative |
| odium | Strong dislike, contempt, or aversion |
| imprecation | A curse; the act of cursing |
| deprecate | To express disapproval of; to belittle |
| obsequious | Full of or exhibiting servile compliance |
| undulant | Resembling waves |
| undulate | To have a wavelike appearance or form |
| improvident | Not providing for the future; thriftless |
| rectitude | Moral uprightness; righteousness |