energy |
the ability to have force or power or to do work. There are many kinds of energy such as physical, electrical, nuclear, or chemical. |
frighten |
to cause fear in someone; to make someone afraid. |
hood |
a covering for the head and neck that may be attached to a coat, jacket, or other piece of clothing. |
jog |
to run at a slow rate for exercise. |
mail |
letters, packages, and other things sent and received through an official system. |
maker |
someone or something that puts together a new thing. |
march |
to walk with steady, regular steps together with others. |
mark |
a spot, line, or other shape that can be seen on a surface. |
outstanding |
better than most others; excellent. |
photograph |
a picture made by using a camera that records an image. |
pupil1 |
a young person who is taught by a teacher. |
reader |
a person who looks at and understands words on a page or screen. |
servant |
a person whose job is to clean another person's house, cook their food, or help them in other ways in their home, often living in the home also. |
spine |
the set of bones that go down the center of the back of a human or animal. |
widow |
a woman whose husband has died. |