| A | B |
| Subside | to sit under; to sink to a lower level;to settle down |
| Xenophobia | fear or hatred of foeigners or strangers |
| Abdicate | to proclaim away; to renounce formally a throne or high office |
| Stenographer | one who uses narrow or small writing (shorthand); a person who takes dictation in shorhand |
| Trigonometry | the branch of mathematics that deals with the relations between the sides and angles of triangles and the calculations based on these |
| Pantheism | the doctrine that God is all the laws and forces of nature and the universe |
| Anglophile | one who greatly admires England, its customs, and its people |
| Proclivity | a slope forward; an inclination toward something, especially toward something objectionable |
| Ascribe | to write to; to attribute |
| Subject | to throw under the influence of; to submit to the authority of, as to subject oneself to a strict diet. also, acourse, ans in the subject of math. |