Updates
Your unread post, follow, and push notifications will appear here.
TRO'PIST, n. [from trope.] One who explains the Scriptures by tropes and figures...
TROP'ICALLY, adv. In a tropical or figurative manner.
TROP'ICAL, a. Pertaining to the tropics; being within the tropics; as tropical c...
TROP'IC-BIRD, n. An aquatic fowl of the genus Phaeton, with a long slender tail ...
TROP'IC, n. [L. tropicus; from Gr. a turning; to turn.] 1. In astronomy, a circl...
TRO'PHY-MONEY, n. A duty paid in England annually by house-keepers, towards prov...
TRO'PHY, n. [L. tropoeum.] 1. Among the ancients, a pile of arms taken from a va...
TRO'PHIED, a. [from trophy.] Adorned with trophies. --The trophied arches, stori...
TROPE, n. [L. tropus; Gr. to turn.] In rhetoric, a word or expression used in a ...
TROOP'ING, ppr. Moving together in a crowd; marching in a body.
TROOP'ER, n. A private or soldier in a body of cavalry; a horse soldier.
TROOP, n. 1. A collection of people; a company; a number; a multitude. Gen 49. 2...
TRONE, n. A provincial word in some parts of England for a small drain.
TRON'CO, n. [L. truncus.] A term in Italian music, directing a note or sound to ...
TRONA'TOR, n. An officer in London, whose business was to weigh wool.
TRON'AGE, n. Formerly, a toll or duty paid for weighing wool.