| A | B |
| Homicide | The killing of one human being by another. |
| Premeditated | Something that was planned and well thought out. |
| Evidence | Facts established and accepted in a court of law. |
| Testimony | A solemn declaration made orally by a witness under oath. |
| Proof | Way or means of showing beyond a reasonable doubt the truth of something. |
| Reasonable | Not extreme or excessive. Agreeable to reason. |
| Acquittal | To set free from a charge. |
| Defendant | A person accused or sued in a court of law. |
| Defense | The defending party or group. (As if in a court of law) |
| Jury | A body of people sworn to give a verdict on some manner. |
| Prosecution | The carrying on of a law suit. The party that starts action against another in a court of law. |
| Verdict | The finding or decision of a jury on the matter submitted to them. |
| Intimidate | To make timid or fearful. |
| Flustered | A state of agitated confusion. |
| Dialogue | A conversation between two or more people. |
| Sheepish | Embarrassed by consciousness of fault. |
| Contorts | To twist into a strange shape of expression. |
| Adlib | Spoken, composed, or performed without preparation. |
| Infuriate | To make furious; enrage. |
| Sadist | One who delights in cruelty. |
| Motive | Something that causes a person to act. |
| Abstain | To refrain deliberately and often with an effort of self-denial from an action or practice. |