torrid
IPA: tˈɔrʌd
adjective
- Very hot and dry.
- Full of intense emotions arising from sexual love; ardent and passionate.
- (chiefly Britain) Full of difficulty.
- (chiefly US, sports) [of a streak, form, etc.] Good, impressive, hot
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Examples of "torrid" in Sentences
- After a torrid affair, the younger man dies.
- Gonzalez completed the first half on a torrid pace.
- The temperature ranged from torrid heat to icy cold.
- Arizona lost the game despite a torrid third quarter.
- Matilda and Quan become romantically in a brief torrid affair.
- The two embark on a torrid affair, and soon fall passionately in love.
- That was her torrid and inflaming time, This is her tolerable tropic clime.
- Of course, prostitution continues at a torrid pace at the O'Farrell Theatre.
- After Holliday's arrival in late July, the Cardinals went on a torrid streak.
- Despite going into the game with high expectations, England had a torrid time.
- Each game will probably be like Thursday, the two in torrid conflict, until one team finally cracks.
- The equatorial region of the earth, otherwise known as the torrid clime, was considered impassable by ship.
- Richard Burton, is a living proof that intense work, mental and physical, sojourn in torrid and frozen climes, danger from dagger and from pestilence, 'age' a person of good sound constitution far less than may be supposed ....
- I had carried Nat forth into the glade before the hut, where the sun might fall on him temperately, after a torrid day -- torrid, that is to say, on the heights, but in our hollow, pight about with the trees, the air had clung heavily.
- It seems, however, from the facts before us that the different zones on the sun, corresponding to what we call the torrid and temperate zones on the earth, persist in rotating with velocities which gradually decrease from the equator towards the poles.
- The central region, lying beneath the track of the sun, was termed the torrid zone; the two regions between the tropics and the polar circles were termed the temperate zones, and the remaining parts, between the porlar circles and the poles, the frigid zones.
- Orwell composed that novel of aching remembrance in torrid Morocco, so I make no apology for saying that McEwan put me in mind, twice, of John Keats as he gazed on the work of ancient Attica: “Thou still unravish’d bride of quietness/Thou foster-child of silence and slow time.”
- The district attorney who defended the Texas law criminalizing homosexuality before the US Supreme Court is desperately trying to keep his job following the discovery of e-mails containing sexually explicit videos, racist jokes and what is described as torrid love notes to his executive secretary.
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