Equators [noun]

Definition of Equators:

globe, ball; semicircular area

Synonyms of Equators:

Hoop

Sphere

Arc

Bend

Ring

Disk

Eye

Orb

Circle

Wheel

Circlet

Curvature

Band

Arch

Gyre

Ringlet

Curve

Orbit

Bow

Loop

Disc

Curvation


Opposite/Antonyms of Equators:

Line


Sentence/Example of Equators:

The measurements suggest that the asteroid’s rubble pile is unevenly distributed along its surface and is especially light at the asteroid’s equator.

It’s not perfectly round, but larger and cooler at its equator than at the poles, making the poles of the star appear brighter.

Scientists usually forecast flu seasons’ severity in the north by watching what happens south of the equator, where flu season falls in the middle of the year.

All of the familiar ones orbit in a single plane aligned with the Sun's equator and move in the same direction.

They run parallel to the ground and point toward the equator.

It is about three leagues wide and is forty-four and one half degrees from the Equator.

The difference in the length of day and night decreases more and more the nearer you approach the Equator.

It was of a cylindrical shape, having a deep zone at the equator, and a containing capacity of about 300 feet.

This covering extends rather less far toward the planet's equator than does the snow sheet on our continents.

Then let us imagine the particle moving toward the equator with the speed of an ordinary wind.