| A | B |
| decorum | correctness in behavior or manners;standards or conventions of socially acceptable behavior |
| espouse | to support or argue for an idea or a cause |
| exhilaration | cheerfulness; high spirits |
| exorbitant | excessive, especially in amount or cost; beyond what is reasonable |
| extricate | to free from a tangled situation or difficulty |
| facilitate | to make easier to do or to get |
| orthodox | following established beliefs or rules, especially in religion; following what is customary |
| rejuvenate | to make someone feel young again; to make something seem new |
| synchronize | to cause to occur at exactly the same time; to cause watches to agree in time |
| tenuous | having little substance or bias; weak; poorly supported |