Tropical Definition–adjective | 1. | pertaining to, characteristic of, occurring in, or inhabiting the tropics, esp. the humid tropics: tropical flowers. | | 2. | very hot and humid: a tropical climate. | | 3. | designed for use in the tropics or in very hot weather (often used in combination): tropical-weight woolens. | | 4. | of or pertaining to either or both of the astronomical tropics. | | 5. | pertaining to, characterized by, or of the nature of a trope or tropes; metaphorical. | –noun | 6. | tropicals, lightweight clothing, suitable for warm, esp. summer weather. | | From Dictionary
Plant Definition–noun | 1. | any member of the kingdom Plantae, comprising multicellular organisms that typically produce their own food from inorganic matter by the process of photosynthesis and that have more or less rigid cell walls containing cellulose, including vascular plants, mosses, liverworts, and hornworts: some classification schemes may include fungi, algae, bacteria, blue-green algae, and certain single-celled eukaryotes that have plantlike qualities, as rigid cell walls or photosynthesis. | | 2. | an herb or other small vegetable growth, in contrast with a tree or a shrub. | | 3. | a seedling or a growing slip, esp. one ready for transplanting. | | 4. | the equipment, including the fixtures, machinery, tools, etc., and often the buildings, necessary to carry on any industrial business: a manufacturing plant. | | 5. | the complete equipment or apparatus for a particular mechanical process or operation: the heating plant for a home. | | 6. | the buildings, equipment, etc., of an institution: the sprawling plant of the university. | | 7. | Slang. something intended to trap, decoy, or lure, as criminals. | | 8. | Slang. a scheme to trap, trick, swindle, or defraud. | | 9. | a person, placed in an audience, whose rehearsed or prepared reactions, comments, etc., appear spontaneous to the rest of the audience. | | 10. | a person placed secretly in a group or organization, as by a foreign government, to obtain internal or secret information, stir up discontent, etc. | | 11. | Theater. a line of dial
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ogue, or a character, action, etc., introducing an idea or theme that will be further developed at a later point in the play: Afterward we remembered the suicide plant in the second act. | –verb (used with object) | 12. | to put or set in the ground for growth, as seeds, young trees, etc. | | 13. | to furnish or stock (land) with plants: to plant a section with corn. | | 14. | to establish or implant (ideas, principles, doctrines, etc.): to plant a love for learning in growing children. | | 15. | to introduce (a breed of animals) into a country. | | 16. | to deposit (young fish, or spawn) in a river, lake, etc. | | 18. | to insert or set firmly in or on the ground or some other body or surface: to plant posts along a road. | | 19. | Theater. to insert or place (an idea, person, or thing) in a play. | | 21. | to place with great force, firmness, or determination: He planted himself in the doorway as if daring us to try to enter. He planted a big kiss on his son's cheek. | | 22. | to station; post: to plant a police officer on every corner. | | 23. | to locate; situate: Branch stores are planted all over. | | 24. | to establish (a colony, city, etc.); found. | | 25. | to settle (persons), as in a colony. | | 26. | to say or place (something) in order to obtain a desired result, esp. one that will seem spontaneous: The police planted the story in the newspaper in order to trap the thief. | | 27. | Carpentry. to nail, glue, or otherwise attach (a molding or the like) to a surface. | | 28. | to place (a person) secretly in a group to function as a spy or to promote discord. | | 29. | Slang. to hide or conceal, as stolen goods. | | From Dictionary
Related topics from Britannicacarnivorous plant any plant especially adapted for capturing insects and other tiny animals by means of ingenious pitfalls and traps and then subjecting them to the decomposing action of digestive enzymes, bacteria, ...
tropical storm organized centre of low pressure that originates over warm tropical oceans. The maximum sustained surface winds of tropical storms range from 63 to 118 km (39 to 73 miles) per hour. These storms ...
sensitive plant either of two plants, in the pea family (Fabaceae), that respond to touch and other stimulation by closing up their leaves and drooping. The more common plant is Mimosa pudica, also called humble ...
oil plant any of the numerous plants, either under cultivation or growing wild, used as sources of oil. Oil plants include trees such as palm, herbaceous plants such as flax, and even fungi (Fusarium).castor-oil plant (Ricinus communis), large plant, of the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae), grown commercially for the pharmaceutical and industrial uses of its oil and for use in landscaping because of its handsome, ...
monsoon forest open woodland in tropical areas that have a long dry season followed by a season of heavy rainfall. The trees in a monsoon forest usually shed their leaves during the dry season and come into leaf at ...
horticulture There is no sharp line of demarcation between the tropics and the subtropics. Just as many tropical plants can be cultivated in the subtropics, so also many subtropical and even temperate plants can ...
gardening Most plants have a precise level of tolerance to cold, below which they are killed. Many plants from tropical or subtropical regions cannot survive frost and are killed by temperatures below 32 F (0 ...
Costa Rica Dense broad-leaved evergreen forest, which includes mahogany and tropical cedar trees, covers about one-third of Costa Rica's landscape. On the Talamanca range grow numerous evergreen oaks and, ...
Cuba Cuba's lush tropical plant life includes thousands of flowering plant species, half of which may be endemic to the archipelago. Much of the original vegetation has been replaced by sugarcane, coffee, ...
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