| A | B |
| ascribe | to write; to attribute |
| conscription | names written together; an enforced enrollment or military draft |
| inscribe | to write in, as the dedication to a book |
| manuscript | a composition for publication |
| nondescript | not easy to write about or describe, lacking in distinctive qualities |
| prescribe | in medicine, to order a treatment |
| proscribe | to condem or forbid as harmful |
| scribe | one who copies manuscript |
| script | the written copy of a play used by actors to learn their lines |
| scripture | the bible |
| scribe | to write; to attribute |
| subscribe | to support or give approval to an idea |
| transcribe | to write over again, as to transcribe notes |
| re | back, again |
| recede | to go back, as a river recedes from its banks |
| receive | to take something offered |
| recreation | the refreshment of mind or body through some form of play or amusement |
| referee | an official in a sports contest |
| remit | to send back, as to remit payment |
| reside | to dwell, as to reside in a house |
| retain | to hold back in one's posession |
| revenue | taxes and other income collected by a government |
| revise | to see again in order to correc errors |
| revive | to cause to live again |
| recalcitrant | stubbornly rellious |
| recant | to renounce a belief formerly held, especially in a formal or public matter |
| recession | a period of reduced economic activity |
| recluse | one who lives shut back from the world |
| remiss | lax in attending to duty |
| remission | forgiveness, as remission of sins |
| renaissance | the revival of classical art, literature, and learning in Europe in the fourteenth, fifthteenth, abd sixteenth centuries |
| resilience | the ability to recover quickly from illness, cahnge , or misfortuen |
| revert | to return to a former habit or condition |