| A | B |
| ample | Plenty; more than enough; Large in size. |
| burden | Something that is carried, especially a heavy load; Anything that is hard to bear; To add to what one has to bear. |
| compassion | A feeling of sharing the suffering of others and of wanting to help; sympathy; pity. |
| compassionate | The state of showing compassion. |
| comply | To act in agreement with a rules or another's wishes. |
| cumbersome | Awkward and hard to handle; unwieldy. |
| distress | To cause pain or sorrow; to trouble or worry; Pain, sorrow, or worry. |
| encounter | To meet unexpectedly; To be faced with; A chance meeting; A battle or fight. |
| exert | To put forth effort. |
| exertion | The act of tiring oneself; a strong effort. |
| indignant | Angry or resentful about something that seems wrong or unfair. |
| indignation | Anger that is caused by something mean or unfair. |
| jest | A joke or the act of joking; To joke or say things lightheartedly. |
| mirth | Laughter; joyfulness expressed through laughter. |
| moral | A useful lesson about life; Having to do with questions of right and wrong; Based on what is right and proper. |
| outskirts | The parts far from the center, as of a town. |
| resume | To begin again after a pause; To occupy again. |
| ridicule | To make fun of; to mock; Words or actions intended to make fun of or mock. |
| ridiculous | Laughable; deserving of mockery. |