| A | B |
| accurate | able to give a correct reading or meausrement, without mistakes or erros in facts, correctness, exactness |
| approximate | not exact, but close enough to be reasonably correct |
| course | the path over which something moves, a way of acting or behaving, a subject or set of subjects to be studies |
| depart | to leave, to go away from a place, the act of leaving |
| despair | to lose hope, a total lack of hope |
| destination | the place to which something or someone is going |
| deteriorate | to make or become worse |
| gale | a very strong wind, a loud outburst |
| horizon | the apparent line in the distance where the skiy meets the sea or land, going straight across from side to side |
| jubilation | a feeling or expression of great job, very happy |
| navigate | to calculate or direct the movement of a ship or aircraft, the science or practice of navigating |
| nostalgia | a longing for a certain time in the past, having feelings of nostalgia |
| revive | to make or become strong again, to bring back into use of fashion |
| sever | to break off, to cut in two |
| voyage | a long journey by sea or in space, to make a journey by sea or in space |