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Tropos

Tropos is a Greek root from τρόπος (tropos), meaning “turn,” “way,” or “manner.” In English usage, it is not a standalone term but a bound morpheme that appears in many scientific and literary terms as tropo- or -trope in compounds.

Etymology and usage: The root derives from Greek and functions as a combining form in a variety

Biology and physiology: In biology, the base appears in terms such as tropism (e.g., phototropism, gravitropism,

Atmospheric science: In meteorology and atmospheric science, the term troposphere uses the same root. The troposphere

Rhetoric and literature: In rhetoric, a trope is a figure of speech that involves a turn or

See also terms commonly linked to the root, such as tropism, tropopause, troposphere, and trope, which illustrate

of
disciplines.
The
prefix
tropo-
(also
seen
as
tropos-
in
some
transliterations)
signals
a
turning
or
directional
sense
in
the
word
it
forms.
chemotropism),
which
describe
directional
growth
or
movement
of
organisms
toward
or
away
from
stimuli.
The
underlying
sense
is
a
turning
or
bending
toward
a
stimulus.
is
the
lowest
layer
of
Earth’s
atmosphere,
extending
from
the
surface
to
about
8
to
15
kilometers
(varying
with
latitude).
It
is
the
region
where
weather
phenomena
occur
and
where
convection
and
mixing
drive
much
of
the
atmospheric
dynamics.
shift
in
the
ordinary
meaning
of
words,
such
as
metaphor
or
irony.
The
concept
likewise
derives
from
the
same
root
referring
to
a
“turn”
in
expression.
the
broadCross-disciplinary
use
of
the
trope/
tropo
root
in
science
and
language.