| A | B |
| psychology | n. Science dealing with the mind and with mental and emotional problems |
| tangible | adj. That can be understood; definite; objective |
| specter | n. Disturbing thoughts |
| refute | v. Prove (an argument or statement) to be false by argument or evidence |
| illiteracy | n. Inability to read or write |
| obscure | v. Conceal or hide |
| syndromes | n. A number of symptoms occurring together and characterizing a specific disease or condition |
| introspective | adj. Inward looking; thoughtful |
| raw shok (Rorschach test) | n. a psychological test involving inkblots that the subject describes. |
| motor-vation (motivation) | n. The desire to work hard and achieve a goal. |
| Eye-q (IQ) | n. Intelligence quotient. A way of measuring human intelligence. |
| neurosurgeons | n. Doctors who operate on the nervous system, including the brain and spine. |
| naivete | n. Simplicity |
| theme | The central message, concern, or purpose of a literary work. |
| dynamic character | a character who changes or grows during the course of the work |
| static character | a character who does not change |
| first-person point of view | the point of view told by a character who uses the first-person pronoun "I." |