| A | B |
| Obliterate | To blot out completely, destroy utterly. |
| Ransack | To search or examine thoroughly; to rob, plunder. |
| Gratify | To please, satisfy; to indulge or humor |
| Irascible | Easily made angry, hot-tempered |
| Epoch | A distinct period of time, age |
| Vendor | A person who sells something. |
| Solvent | Able to meet one’s financial obligations; having the power to dissolve other substances. |
| Naive | Innocent, unsophisticated, showing lack of worldly knowledge and experience. |
| Amplify | To make stronger, larger, greater, louder |
| Arrogant | Haughty, too convinced of one’s own importance. |
| Ramshackle | Appearing ready to collapse, loose and shaky |
| Rote | Unthinking routine or repetition, a fixed or mechanical way of doing something. |
| Infinite | Exceedingly great, inexhaustible, without limit. |
| Estrange | To drift apart or become unfriendly; to cause such a separation; to remove or keep at a distance. |
| Disclaim | To deny interest in or connection with; to give up all claim to. |
| Tedious | Long and tiresome. |
| Niche | A decorative recess in a wall; A suitable place or position for a person or thing. |
| Kindred | A person’s relatives; A family relationship. |
| Armistice | A temporary peace, halt in fighting. |
| Bland | Gentle, soothing, mild; lacking interest or taste. |