| A | B |
| amoral | neither moral nor immoral |
| beneficial | conferring benefit; advantageous; helpful |
| castigate | to punish in order to correct; to criticize severely |
| coalesce | to unite so as to form one mass, community, etc. |
| compassion | a feeling of sorrow or pity for the sufferings or misfortunes of another |
| comply | to act in accordance with wishes, commands, requests, requirements, etc. |
| contradict | to assert the contrary or opposite of |
| covert | concealed, secret, disguised |
| culpable | deserving blame or censure |
| deletrious | injurious to health; hurtful; harmful |
| disdain | to look upon or treat with contempt; to regard as unworthy |
| eccentric | deviating from the recognized or usual; odd |
| euphony | agreeableness of sound (esp. speech) |
| innocuous | not harmful or injurious; harmless |
| overt | open to view or knowledge; not concealed or secret |
| paragon | a model of excellence |
| respite | an interval of relief |
| scrupulous | having scruples; minutely careful, precise, or exact |
| tactile | of or pertaining to the sense of touch |
| torrid | subject to parching or burning heat; ardent, passionate |
| trite | commonplace; hackneyed by constant use or repetition |