| A | B |
| to stray or wander away from what is considered normal or right; irregularity. | aberration |
| Something that runs ahead and proclaims the arrival of someone or something; indication that a specific event will soon take place. | precursor |
| containing or based on an unsound argument; intent to lead astray or deceive through faulty reasoning. | fallacious |
| the area that a single master or government controls. | dominion |
| unpersuadable through logic, pity, or sentiment; unyielding; hard to change | obdurate |
| tending to produce or lead to a certain result (usu. fol. by to). | conducive |
| one who cares for, oversees, or tends to the collections of a museum, library, or the like. | curator |
| asleep, or in a state of rest that is similar to sleep. | dormant |
| to share stories with another person; chat. | confabulate |
| To grow larger by means of gathering together into one, unified heap | cumulative |
| To limit, by any means the area, in which something may move about. | confinement |
| an act or the practice of conscious, deliberate disloyalty or treachery; to use someone's faith or trust in a thing to do harm or damage. | perfidy |
| to say or read aloud for someone to write down or for a machine to record. | dictate |
| a partial or complete set of artificial teeth; false teeth. | dentures |
| to forgive, disregard, or overlook voluntarily or without condemning. | condone |