| A | B |
| exposition | a public display or exhibition, such as a world's fair |
| kindergarten | a school for children about four to six years of age |
| machine | a device with moving parts that performs a task in repairing or making something |
| fertilizer | something added soil to make it produce more crops |
| kerosene | a thin oil sometimes used for burning in a cooking stove,lamp or heater |
| electricity | a form of energy that can produce light, heat, and motion |
| lightbulb | incandescent lamp |
| photograph | a picture taken with a camera |
| carriage | a vehicle with wheels used for carrying persons |
| restaurant | a public eating place |
| engineer | a person who operates an engine; a person who is skilled in designing buildings, machines, electrical systems and other things using science and math |
| consumer | a person who buys and uses a product |
| licorice | a black, sweet-tasting, gummy extract from a plant; candy flavored with this extract |
| bicycle | a light vehicle having two wheels one behind the other |
| invent | to create or produce something for the first time |
| lawyer | a person whose work is giving advice to others about the laws or acting for others in court |
| telephone | an instrument for transmitting and receiving sounds over long distances by electricity |
| fairground | an area set aside for fairs, circuses, or exhibitions |
| exhibit | an article or collection shown in an exhibition |
| agriculture | the cultivating of the soil, producing crops, and raising of livestock |