| A | B |
| haunt | to visit often or continually; to appear or recur repeatedly; to fill the atmosphere of; a place often visited |
| leash | a cord or strap used to hold a dog or some other animal in check; to control or check; to tie up |
| supervise | to oversee, direct, or manage |
| congregate | to gather in a mass or crowd; to assemble |
| hover | to stay suspended or to flutter in the air near one place; to linger or wait close by, especially in an anxious way |
| signify | to be a sign or indication of; to show or make known |
| motive | an inner drive or impulse that causes a person to act in a certain way |
| maturity | the state of being fully grown or developed |
| loiter | to linger in an aimless way; to move slowly, stopping frequently |
| ignorance | lacking knowledge; unawareness |
| threshold | a doorsill; the entrance or beginning point |
| audible | can be heard; loud enough to hear |
| subtle | requiring mental keenness; not open or direct; skillfull; not obvious |
| candid | fair, just; honest, frank; unposed and informal |
| notorious | well known; widely and unfavorably known or talked about |
| conspicuous | easy to see; attracting attention |
| modest | not vain or boastful; shy, quiet; decent; reasonable, not extreme |
| diaphragm | the muscles between the chest cavity and the abdominal cavity; the midriff |
| lenient | not harsh or strict when judging or disciplining; merciful |
| idle | inactive; useless, pointless; without foundation; to waste; to be inactive; to operate an engine without engaging the gears that move machinery |