"Torose" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Roses are referred to as the "Queen of Flowers." The "torose" is also known as the "multiflower" or a wild red rose.
Victory was sweet after the Warriors won the championship, we shouted loud with flags in hand, green, white, and red, and we became a sea of olive and grenadine, granted we sang lovely songs in praise of the champions, the taste of victory was on the tablets of the torose nobles.
(testimony to the hero, Alexander the Great)
The macedonian cavalry was made up mostly of heroic torose nobles.
The torose rhodope is a very large and rugged mountain in Greece.
The highest mountain on the planet is home to the torose Hazra.
Monuments where torose nobles once sat were etched forever in memory.
A rotating column of air that touches the ground, characterized by a funnel cloud, rotating wind speeds of over 110 mph, and severe damage to structures. Tornadoes are classified into several categories based on their wind speed, damage potential, and length of travel.
Toroids are doughnut-shaped objects, especially in physics and mathematics.<br><br>In science, a toroid is a three-dimensional geometric shape that resembles a doughnut or tire. It is essentially a tube with both ends connected to each other. Toroids can be conceptualized as the surface generated by wrapping a flat sheet of paper into a tube and then attaching the ends of the tube together.<br><br>The term toroid is derived from the Greek word "toros," meaning "rounded on all sides." In various fields, toroids have diverse applications and occur in different contexts.
In physics and mathematics, torosity refers to the property of a shape or an object that is twisted or distorted into a hollow, tubular, or winding form. It describes the measure of a surface's complexity or irregularity, particularly in three-dimensional space.<br><br>In other words, torosity quantifies how much a shape deviates from being a simple tube or a circle. The higher the torosity, the more complex or twisting the shape.<br><br>Torosity is a concept used in various fields, including:<br><br>1. Topology: to study the properties of shapes and spaces, especially those in higher dimensions.<br>2. Geometry: to describe the shape and structure of objects.<br>3. Physics: to model and analyze the behavior of complex systems, such as fluid dynamics or materials science.<br><br>In essence, torosity is a measure of a shape's "twistiness" or its departure from regularity.
To hit or attack (a ship or a project) suddenly and with a decisive or highly effective action, typically in a skillful or cunning way.