| A | B |
| subservient | submissive; obedient; useful or of service, especially as a subordinate |
| rudiments | a fundamental principle, rule, or step; an early or undeveloped form or stage or something |
| gibes | to make mocking remarks; to jeer; to scoff; n. a derisive remark; a taunt |
| bumptious | conceited and arrogant; crudely and unpleasantly forward |
| repartee | a quick, witty reply or retort; skill in making clever, witty responses |
| consonant | in agreement, accord, harmony; n. any letter not a vowel |
| satiate | to satisfy an appetite fully; to provide with more than enough |
| sanction | authorized permission or approval; a step taken by a country to force another country to obey international law; v. to confirm, aprove, or permit officially |
| vivacious | animated; lively; spirited; sprightly |
| cited | to quote; to mention by way of example or proof to commend for bravery in an official report; to summon before a court |
| comely | having a pleasant apperance; attractive; suitable |
| miscreant | a villian; an eviloder; adj. criminal; evil |
| flaunt | to show off; to display oneself proudly or conspiciously |
| decadence | a process, condition, or period of decline or decay; deterioration; moral decay |
| sterotypes | a generalized, oversimplified view or opinion that members of a group rigidly apply to a thing, and idea, or another group |
| pretentious | claiming an undeserved distinction; affectedly grand |
| ostentatious | too showy; done in an overly elaborate way to attract attention |
| hypercritical | too severe in judgement |
| erroneous | false, mistaken, incorrect |
| irscible | easily angered; given to outburst of temper, irritable |