| A | B |
| accustomed | customary; usual; habitual; familiar through use or repeated experience |
| charge | to trust with a responsibility or duty; to place a load or burden upon |
| collective | having to do with a group of individuals viewed as a whole; mass; sum |
| conscientious | controlled by one's sense of right; just; upright; careful |
| swoop | to descend suddenly, often in an attack |
| individual | involving or concerning a single person or thing; particular; separate |
| peep | to look at slyly or secretly, especially through a small opening |
| rapture | extreme joy or delight; ecstasy |
| smother | to hide by covering up; to suppress; to suffocate |
| glee | joy; merriment; exultation; delight |