savanna

sah-VAN-ah

A tropical or subtropical grassland with scattered trees — too dry for forest, too wet for desert. Savannas cover roughly a fifth of the earth's land surface, including the great plains of East Africa, the cerrado of Brazil, and the northern Australian outback. The defining character is openness with trees — enough grass to carry fire, enough trees to cast shade, and the interplay between the two maintained by climate, grazing, and flame.
Etymology
Spanish sabana, from Taíno zabana, a treeless plain. The word arrived in English via the Caribbean.
grassland/prairie Indigenous Taíno terrain
*

Random Word