| A | B |
| accession | An acquisition or addition. |
| accrue | To grow or increase as a financial or legal asset or obligation. |
| augment | To increase, enlarge, or make greater in size, strength, or amount. |
| amass | To collect, pile up, or accumulate. |
| aggrandize | To make greater in power, position, or riches. |
| embellish | To decorate, beautify, or ornament |
| interpolate | To alter or corrupt a text by inserting a word, phrase, or passage. |
| evolve | To unfold or develop gradually; or to work out or derive. |
| fledge | To provide feathers necessary for flying; or to rear a young bird until it is ready to fly. |
| concatenation | A linking together in a chain or series |
| reconstitute | To form again, reconstruct, or recompose |
| constrict | To draw together, squeeze, or make narrower. |
| abate | To diminish, subside, or lessen. |
| allay | To relieve, calm, or alleviate. |
| slake | To satisfy, quench, or allay. |
| slough | To discard, shed, or cast off. |
| divest | To unclothe; or to deprive or strip one of one's possessions, rights, or rank. |
| denude | To strip covering from, or to make naked or bare. |
| gut | To destroy or remove the interior contents of. |