| A | B |
| disarray | (noun) a lack of order or sequence. |
| ailment | (noun) a bodily sickness, disorder, or chronic disease. |
| mollify | (verb) soothe in temper or disposition : pacify. |
| avenge | (verb) to take vengeance for or on behalf of (oneself or another). |
| bulwark | (noun) something that offers strong support or protection in danger : a powerful means of defense. |
| manufacture | (verb) to produce according to an organized plan and with division of labor. |
| cinematic | (adjective) played, narrated, or otherwise presented for photographing with a motion-picture camera and projection on a screen or suited or adapted for such reproduction. |
| antipathy | (noun) settled aversion or dislike : repugnance, distaste. |
| situation | (noun) a critical, trying, or unusual state of affairs. |
| morale | (noun) a sense of common purpose or a degree of dedication to a common task regarded as characteristic of or dominant in a particular group or organization. |
| incentive | (noun) something (as fear or hope of reward) that constitutes a motive or stimulus. |
| freight | (noun) something that is loaded for transportation : cargo. |
| mugwump | (noun) the head or leader of any body of persons. |
| pontiff | (noun) a high priest or chief religious figure. |
| dissemble | (verb) to conceal facts, motives, intentions, or feelings under some pretense. |
| piety | (noun) zeal in religious service or worship : devoutness. |
| agitation | (noun) mental excitement or emotional perturbation : a tremulous and disturbed state. |
| permafrost | (noun) a permanently frozen layer of soil, subsoil, or other deposit occurring at variable depth below the earth's surface in arctic or subarctic regions. |
| expunge | (verb) to obliterate (a material record or trace) by any means. |
| duplicity | (noun) deception by pretending to entertain one set of feelings and acting under the influence of another. |