| A | B | 
| suffrage | the right to vote | 
| condemned | to express an unfavorable or adverse judgment | 
| exercised | something done or performed as a means of practice | 
| outlawed | a lawless person or habitual criminal | 
| movement | abundance of events or incidents | 
| circulated | to pass from place to place, from person to person | 
| petitions | a request made for something desired | 
| Clergymen | an ordained Christian minister | 
| advocate | to speak or write in favor of | 
| discrimination | treatment or consideration of, or making a distinction in favor of or against | 
| political | exercising or seeking power in the affairs of a state | 
| secure | free from care | 
| Anglo-women | Caucasion or white women | 
| convention | a meeting or formal assembly | 
| abolish | put an end to | 
| abolitionist | a person who favors the abolition of any law or practice deemed harmful to society | 
| abolition | the legal prohibition and ending of slavery | 
| enslaved | to make a slave of; | 
| slavery | the keeping of slaves |