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Wiktionary
tropics

n. 1 (plural of tropic English) 2 (context geography English) The region of the Earth, centred on the equator and lying between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn and characterized by a hot climate.

WordNet
tropics

n. the part of the Earth's surface between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn; characterized by a hot climate [syn: Torrid Zone, tropical zone]

Wikipedia
Tropics

The tropics are a region of the Earth surrounding the Equator. They are delimited in latitude by the Tropic of Cancer in the Northern Hemisphere at N and the Tropic of Capricorn in the Southern Hemisphere at S; these latitudes correspond to the axial tilt of the Earth. The tropics are also referred to as the tropical zone and the torrid zone (see geographical zone). The tropics include all the areas on the Earth where the Sun is 'a point directly overhead at least once during the solar year (which is a subsolar point).

The tropics are distinguished from the other climatic and biomatic regions of Earth, which are the middle latitudes and the polar regions on either side of the equatorial zone.

Tropics (disambiguation)

The tropics is a region of the Earth by the Equator.

Tropics may also refer to:

  • Miami Tropics, a team in the Premier Basketball League
  • Miami Tropics (football), a professional football team
  • West Palm Beach Tropics, one of the eight original franchises of the Senior Professional Baseball Association
  • Tropics, an English electronic musician
Tropics (musician)

Tropics is the stage name of English electronic musician Christopher Ward.

Usage examples of "tropics".

The Peninsula is a gorgeous tropic land, and, with its bounteous rainfall and sunshine, brings forth many of the most highly prized productions of the tropics, with some that are peculiar to itself.

All things were harmonious, the glorious cocoa-palms, the bright green slopes, the sunset gold on the lake-like river, the ranges of forest-covered mountains etherealizing in the purple light, the swarthy faces and scarlet uniforms of the Sikh guard, and rich and luscious odors, floated in on balmy airs, glories of the burning tropics, untellable and incommunicable!

Imperial Institute series of Handbooks to the Commercial Resources of the Tropics, by permission.

The soil, which is continually washed down by the rains into the rivers, is continually renewed by decomposition of the bed rock, and in the tropics this decomposition is more rapid than in temperate climes.

Such is the rapidity of plant growth in the tropics that in three or four years the cacao tree is taller than a man, and begins to bear fruit in its fourth or fifth year.

When the world wakes up to the importance of tropical produce, agricultural colleges will be scattered about the tropics, so that every would-be planter can learn his subject on the spot.

In the tropics their power for destruction is very great, and they are a constant menace to economic products like cacao.

With cacao in the tropics, as with corn in England, the gathering of the harvest is a delight to lovers of the beautiful.

Several manufacturers have had their own buyers in certain places in the Tropics for some years, and it is generally agreed that this has acted as an incentive to the growers to improve the quality.

Whilst the war has not very materially hindered the increase of cacao production in the tropics, the shortage of shipping has prevented the amount exported from maintaining a steady rise.

In the hold of the liner it is rocked thousands of miles over the azure seas of the tropics to the grey-green seas of the temperate zone.

Many a young man, reading in some delightful book of travel, has longed to go to the tropics and see the wonders for himself.

In support of this I cannot do better than quote Grant Allen, who regarded the tropics as the best of all universities.

Few who go to the tropics escape their fascination, and of those that are young, few return to colder climes.

This is fiction, but I think it is true that very few, if any, who become planters in the tropics ever return permanently to England.