| A | B |
| beguile | to deceive; trick |
| civility | politeness; courtesy |
| decorum | appropriateness of behavior or conduct |
| demeanor | the way in which one behaves or conducts oneself |
| foolhardy | foolishly bold or daring; rash |
| glib | performing or performed with careless, often thoughtless,ease |
| ignoble | not having a noble character or purpose; dishonorable |
| mores | the accepted customs and rules of behavior or a particular social group |
| provincial | characteristic of people or things away from the capital of a country |
| unseemly | not in good taste; improper; unbecoming |
| abject | lacking all self-respect; contemptible |
| conjecture | the act of forming an opinion from incomplete evidence; guesswork |
| dejected | depressed; disheartened |
| injection | the act of forcing something, generally a liquid or a gas, into something else |
| jetty | a pier or other structure projecting into a body of water; a wharf |
| objectionable | arousing disapproval; offensive |
| projectile | an object that is thrown, fired, or otherwise launched through space |
| reject | to refuse to accept, use, grant, or consider |
| subjective | taking place within an individual's mind rather than the external environment; personal |
| trajectory | the path made by a moving body or particle, especially the flight path of a missile |