| A | B |
| divulge | To make known (something private or secret). |
| pretentious | Making or marked by an extravagant outward show; ostentatious. |
| miscegenation | The interbreeding of different races or of persons of different racial backgrounds. |
| ambivalence | The coexistence of opposing attitudes or feelings, such as love and hate, toward a person, object, or idea. |
| incredulity | Disbelief; a lack of belief; doubt. |
| incoherently | Unable to think or express one's thoughts in a clear or orderly manner |
| emotional | Marked by or exhibiting strong feeling of any kind. |
| promiscuous | Consisting of diverse, unrelated parts or individuals; confused. |
| dissimulation | Concealing one's true feelings or intentions. |
| purgatory | A state in which the souls of those who have died in grace must expiate their sins. |
| extenuation | The act of lessening or attempting to lessen the magnitude or seriousness of, especially by providing partial excuses. |
| prevailing | Most frequent or common; predominant. |
| intervening | To occur as an extraneous or unplanned circumstance |
| specious | Having the ring of truth or plausibility but actually fallacious |
| expurgate | To remove erroneous, vulgar, obscene, or otherwise objectionable material from (a book, for example) before publication. |
| dilatory | Tending to postpone or delay. |
| impotence | Lacking in power, as to act effectively; helpless. |
| abnegation | Self-denial |
| convivial | Fond of feasting, drinking, and good company; sociable. |
| ingratiate | To bring (oneself, for example) into the favor or good graces of another, especially by deliberate effort. |
| vociferations | uttering (something) or crying out loudly and vehemently, especially in protest. |
| artifice | Subtle but base deception; trickery. |
| circumspection | Heedful of circumstances and potential consequences; prudent; watchfulness. |
| inflexible | Unyielding in purpose, principle, or temper; immovable. |
| construe | To adduce or explain the meaning of; interpret |
| discordant | Not being in accord; conflicting. |
| innate | Possessed at birth; inborn. Possessed as an essential characteristic; inherent. |
| invincible | Incapable of being overcome or defeated; unconquerable. |
| determinant | An influencing or determining element or factor: |
| effervescent | To emit small bubbles of gas, as a carbonated or fermenting liquid |
| proscribe | To prohibit; forbid. |
| acclamation | A shout or salute of enthusiastic approval. |
| apposite | Strikingly appropriate and relevant. |
| transitory | Existing or lasting only a short time; short-lived or temporary: |
| interminable | Being or seeming to be without an end; endless; continual. |
| dictionary | A book that explains the words of a language |
| emancipation | The at of being free from bondage, oppression, or restraint; liberation. |
| abject | Being of the most miserable kind; wretched; Showing absolute hopelessness. |
| extrovert | Marked by interest in and behavior directed toward others or the environment as opposed to or to the exclusion of self; gregarious or outgoing |
| manumission | the act of freeing from slavery or bondage; emancipation. |
| precipitate | To cause to happen, especially suddenly or prematurely; quicken; hasten. |
| expatriate | 1. One who has taken up residence in a foreign country. 2. One who has renounced one's native land. |
| renunciation | The act or an instance of renouncing or of giving up something. |
| inaudible | Impossible to hear |
| prescient | Having the knowledge of actions or events before they occur; foresight. |
| artifact | An object produced or shaped by human craft, especially a tool, weapon, or ornament of archaeological or historical interest. |
| replete | Abundantly supplied; abounding |
| invidious | Tending to rouse ill will, animosity, or resentment |
| enunciate | To state or set forth precisely or systematically |
| satiety | The condition of being full or gratified beyond the point of satisfaction |
| sententiously | Terse and energetic in expression; a saying |
| carnal | Relating to the physical and especially sexual appetites |
| comport | To conduct or behave (oneself) in a particular manner: |
| oppression | Arbitrary and cruel exercise of power |
| expropriate | To deprive of possession; To transfer (another's property) to oneself. |
| contentious | Quarrelsome; Involving or likely to cause contention. |
| repressive | Tending to put down by force, usually before total control has been lost; quell. |
| inconsequential | Lacking importance. |
| auditory | Of or relating to hearing, the organs of hearing, or the sense of hearing. |
| incarnate | Embodied in human form; personified |