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Tritium
  1. noun - a radioactive isotope of hydrogen; atoms of tritium have three times the mass of ordinary hydrogen atoms
Tritoma
  1. noun - a plant of the genus Kniphofia having long grasslike leaves and tall scapes of red or yellow drooping flowers
Tritone
  1. - a musical interval
  2. A superfluous or augmented fourth.
Tritons
  1. noun - (Greek mythology) a sea god; son of Poseidon
  2. small usually bright-colored semiaquatic salamanders of North America and Europe and northern Asia
  3. the largest moon of Neptune
  4. tropical marine gastropods having beautifully colored spiral shells
Triture
  1. - A rubbing or grinding; trituration.
Triumph
  1. noun - a successful ending of a struggle or contest; "a narrow victory"; "the general always gets credit for his army's victory"; "clinched a victory"; "convincing victory"; "the agreement was a triumph for common sense"
  2. be ecstatic with joy
  3. dwell on with satisfaction
  4. prove superior; "The champion prevailed, though it was a hard fight"
  5. the exultation of victory
  6. to express great joy; "Who cannot exult in Spring?"
Trivant
  1. - A truant.
Trivets
  1. noun - a stand with short feet used under a hot dish on a table
  2. a three-legged metal stand for supporting a cooking vessel in a hearth
Trivial
  1. adjective - (informal) small and of little importance; "a fiddling sum of money"; "a footling gesture"; "our worries are lilliputian compared with those of countries that are at war"; "a little (or small) matter"; "a dispute over niggling details"; "limited to petty enterprises"; "piffling efforts"; "giving a police officer a free meal may be against the law, but it seems to be a picayune infraction"
  2. concerned with trivialities; "a trivial young woman"; "a trivial mind"
  3. of little substance or significance; "a few superficial editorial changes"; "only trivial objections"
Trivium
  1. noun - (Middle Ages) an introductory curriculum at a medieval university involving grammar and logic and rhetoric; considered to be a triple way to eloquence