| A | B |
| Nefarious | extremely wicked; vile; atrocious |
| Regrettable | causing to think of with sense of loss; deserving to feel sorrow or remorse for;unfortunate |
| Persecution | the act of harassing persistently or of pressuring with oppressive treatment; the state of being annoyed or troubled persistently; esp. because of religion, race, or beliefs; harass. |
| Moldering | to turn to dust by natural decay; crumble; disintegrate; waste away |
| Shylock | a hard-hearted and revengeful moneylender |
| Reverently | in manner of feeling, exhibition, or characterized by deep respect |
| Virtue | moral excellence; goodness; righteousness |
| Diligence | constant effort to accomplish a goal; persistent use of body or mind |
| Revels | to take intense pleasure or satisfaction. a party or celebration |
| Ambition | an earnest willingness and desire for some type of achievement, as power, honor, fame, or wealth |
| Malice | desire to inflict injury, harm, or suffering on another out of deep-seated meanness |
| Restitution | an equal return for loss, damage, or injury caused; a gesture of apology; the restoration of property or rights previously taken away or surrendered |
| Obligation | something a person is bound to, arising out of a sense of duty; a binding promise, contract, sense of duty |
| Foresight | a plan for the future; knowledge or insight gained by looking forward; a view of the future |
| Begrudge | to give reluctantly or with displeasure; to look upon with disapproval |
| Unscathed | wholly unharmed: not injured |
| Demean | to lower in character, status, or reputation |
| Allusion | an implied or indirect reference especially in literature; the act of hinting at something |
| Behoove | to be necessary, proper, or advantage for |
| Vengeance | punishment inflicted in retaliation for an injury or offence |