| A | B |
| Impromptu | unrehearsed, spontaneous |
| to concide | to happen at or near the same time |
| to reform | to make an improvement, especially by changing a person's behavior or the structure of something |
| pretentious | trying to appear or sound more important or clever than you are, especially in matters of art and literature. |
| captivating | holding the attention of someone by being extremely interesting, exciting, charming or attractive |
| to reciprocate | to share the same feelings as someone else, or to behave in the same way as someone else; to show; feel or give in response or return. |
| to indoctrinate | to repeat an idea or belief frequently to someone in order to persuade them to accept it; to instruct in a body of doctrine or principals |
| to alienate | to make someone feel that they are different and do not belong to a group |
| terse | using few words, sometimes in a way that seems rude or unfriendly |
| redundant | characterized by unnecessary repetition of words or ideas; unnecessary because it is more than needed |
| to condemn | to express strong disapproval of something; to criticize something or someone strongly, usually for moral reasons |
| monotonous | boring; unvayring in tone or content |
| fundamental | basic , essential |
| to dupe | to deceive people, usually making them do something that do not indend to do |
| novice | a person new at something |
| to persecute | to treat someone unfaily or cruelly over a long period of time because of their race, religion, or political beliefs or to annoy someone by refusing to leave them alone |
| subdued | quiet, controlled, lacking in intensity |
| resourceful | able to find solutions |
| prominent | standing out, important,; well known |
| rivalry | an ongoing competition |