A person who takes part in a crime...
Accomplice (n.)
To make easier; to assist
Antonyms: hinder, obstruct, impede
Facilitate (v.)
Hidden, present but not realized
Synonym: dormant, inactive
Latent (adj.)
To scold; find fault with.
Antonym: pat on the back
Reprimand (v.)
A substance that causes or hastens a chemical reaction; an agent that causes change.
Synonyms: spur, instigator
Catalyst (n.)
A large-scale departure or flight.
Antonyms: influx, arrival, entrance
Exodus (n.)
Not letting light through; not clear or lucid; dense; stupid.
Synonym: hazy, cloudy, foggy
Opaque (adj.)
Slavery, forced labor
Antonym: Liberty
Servitude (n.)
To destroy completely...
Synonyms: obliterate, decimate
Annihilate (v.)
Not able to be corrected; beyond control
Antonyms: curable, reparable
Incorrigible (adj.)
Chief in importance, above all others.
Synonyms: supreme, primary, dominant
Paramount (adj.)
Careless and hasty
Antonym: painstaking, thorough
Slapdash (adj.)
Unseasonable; based on one's wishes or whims without regard for reason or fairness
Synonyms: high-handed, autocratic
Arbitrary (adj.)
Having a gloomy or sullen manner; not friendly or sociable
Synonym: morbid
Morose (adj.)
To talk in an aimless, foolish, or simple way; to babble
Synonyms: twaddle, gibberish
Prattle (v.)
Not running or flowing; foul from standing still; inactive
Antonym: Flowing, running, fresh
Stagnant (adj.)
Behavior considered ... in one era may be considered perfectly acceptable in another.
Synonyms: Shameless, impudent, made of brass
Brazen (adj.)
Given to fighting; active and aggressive in support of a cause.
Antonyms: unassertive, peaceable, passive
Militant (adj.)
To offer arguments or evidence that contradict an assertion; to refute
Synonyms: disprove, confute
Rebut (v.)
To give way to superior force, yield
Antonym: overcome, master, conquer
Succumb (v.)