trireme |
an ancient Greek or Roman galley, usu. a warship, with three tiers of oars on each side. |
trisect |
to divide (a line, plane figure, or angle) into three equal parts. |
triskaidekaphobia |
irrational fear of the number thirteen. |
triskelion |
a design or figure consisting of three usu. curved legs, arms, or branches that radiate from a common center. |
trismus |
continuous spasmodic contraction of the jaw muscles, esp. when caused by tetanus. |
trisodium |
of a molecule, containing three sodium atoms. |
trisomic |
having an extra chromosome in the cell in addition to the usual diploid number. |
tri-state |
of or designating an area consisting of all or part of three neighboring U.S. states. |
tristich |
a verse unit, poem, or stanza of three lines; triplet. |
trisulfide |
a sulfide molecule containing three atoms of sulfur. |
trisyllable |
a word having three syllables. |
trite |
ineffective or stale because of frequent repetition; commonplace; hackneyed. |
tritheism |
the belief that the three persons of the Christian Trinity are three separate, distinct gods. |
triticale |
a high-protein grain formed by crossing wheat and rye. |
tritium |
a radioactive isotope of hydrogen, usu. produced synthetically and used in nuclear weapons and radiobiology. (Cf. deuterium, protium.) |
tritoma |
any of several lilylike African plants that bear dense spikes of red or yellow flowers. |
Triton |
in Greek mythology, a sea god having the upper body and head of a man and the tail of a fish, and carrying a conch-shell trumpet. [4 definitions] |
tritone |
a musical interval of three whole tones; augmented fourth. |
triturate |
to grind, rub, or otherwise reduce to fine particles or powder; pulverize. [2 definitions] |
trituration |
the act of triturating, or the condition of being triturated. [2 definitions] |
triumph |
the act, condition, or fact of achieving a great victory or success. [5 definitions] |