英:[ˈtɑ:mæk]
美:[ˈtɑrmæk]
英:[ˈtɑ:mæk]
美:[ˈtɑrmæk]
Tar·mac
tar maek
第三人称单数:tarmacs
现在分词:tarmacking
过去式:tarmacked
过去分词:tarmacked
Noun
1. a paving material of tar and broken stone; mixed in a factory and shaped during paving
2. a paved surface having compressed layers of broken rocks held together with tar
Verb
1. surface with macadam;
"macadam the road"
1903年,商标名 Tarmac,缩写自 tarmacadam(1882年)“通过喷洒沥青在碎石上创建的路面”,源自 tar(n.1)和约翰·L· McAdam(见 macadam)。到1919年, tarmac 在英国被普遍用于“跑道”。
停机坪
Noun from Tarmac, a trademark
The first known use of tarmac was in 1919
tar1 of 2noun
a dark usually thick sticky liquid obtained by distilling wood, coal, or peat
a substance that resembles tarespecially: a sticky substance that is formed by burning tobacco
sailor
tar2 of 2verb
to smear with or as if with tar
tarponnoun
a large silvery sport fish found in the Gulf of Mexico and warm coastal waters of the Atlantic Ocean
tarpaulinnoun
a piece of material (as waterproof canvas) used for protecting exposed objects
tarpnoun
tarpaulin
taronoun
a large-leaved tropical Asian plant grown throughout the tropics for its edible starchy rounded underground stemalso: the stem typically cooked as a vegetable or ground into flour
tarnish1 of 2verb
to make or become dull, dim, or discolored
silver tarnishes
to bring disgrace or cast doubt on
tarnished the family's good name
tarnish2 of 2noun
something that tarnishesespecially: a film of chemically changed material on the surface of a metal (as silver)
tarnish1 of 2verb
to make or become dull, dim, or discolored
silver tarnishes
to bring disgrace or cast doubt on
tarnished the family's good name
tarnish2 of 2noun
something that tarnishesespecially: a film of chemically changed material on the surface of a metal (as silver)
tarnish1 of 2verb
to make or become dull, dim, or discolored
silver tarnishes
to bring disgrace or cast doubt on
tarnished the family's good name
tarnish2 of 2noun
something that tarnishesespecially: a film of chemically changed material on the surface of a metal (as silver)
tarnish1 of 2verb
to make or become dull, dim, or discolored
silver tarnishes
to bring disgrace or cast doubt on
tarnished the family's good name
tarnish2 of 2noun
something that tarnishesespecially: a film of chemically changed material on the surface of a metal (as silver)
tarmacnoun
a road, apron, or runway paved with layers of crushed stone covered with tar
1 I heard it constantly in my street in New York; it pulsed out of windows and shops, as much a feature of that July as melting tarmac and open fire hydrants.
2 After sitting on the tarmac for what seemed like forever, we were informed that there was a mechanical problem and the passengers would need to return to the terminal.
3 At least two of the bags bounce off the cart below and go flying onto the tarmac.
4 The sprawling masterplan for the Olympic site, by Allies and Morrison, saw 242 hectares of the Lower Lea Valley cleansed and reformed as a heroic sporting campus of Teletubby mounds and swathes of tarmac.
5 In video footage posted on social media, the woman is seen making a desperate dash on the tarmac toward the plane before she is restrained by security members at the airport.
6 As soon as we hit the tarmac, I dialed Jon’s number and told him I loved him.
7 Allen further assured Global News that nothing he does on the tarmac in any way misleads or confuses the pilots.
8 Witnesses tweeted that an aircraft, perhaps making an emergency landing, was seen on the tarmac surrounded by emergency vehicles, according to NJ.com.
9 He went on the public-address system, swore at a passenger, grabbed a beer and slid down the tarmac.
10 Episode 1, dubbed “Night Zero,” introduces the contagion when a plane lands on the tarmac at JFK airport in New York.
11 Captain Joe Weis gave his AA Captain wings to Ki Klitenick, 2, a child with Down syndrome on the tarmac of Miami International Airport following a flight from Madrid on Oct.
12 The offending flights, both in 2015, kept passengers waiting on the tarmac for more than four hours without providing an opportunity to deplane, according to DOT investigators.
13 One of my favorite moments in traveling to tropical islands is crossing the threshold from plane to stairway down to the tarmac.
14 Two Delta planes came in contact with each other this evening on the tarmac at O'Hare International Airport, officials said.
15 Heavy precipitation, high winds, low visibility and lightning can all cause a tangle on the tarmac, so airports are finding better ways to track them.
16 In a follow-up tweet, the man was seen being arrested by police on the tarmac.
17 However because of fuel shortages, some aircraft are clogging up the tarmac.
然而由于燃料的短缺, 一些飞机不得已被迫停在碎石路上.
18 Mr Slater then the emergency exit and slid down the inflatable slide on the tarmac.
然后,他打开紧急出口,下滑到了停机坪上的充气滑梯.
19 Instead of pulling into the usual circle where all the other vehicles go, though, ours turns into a small looping road that takes us toward the expanse of tarmac behind the airport.
20 In place of the intricate tissue of courtyards, lumpen gimcrack multi-storey blocks appear, without the slightest pretence of assimilation, and fronted by arid, gated aprons of tarmac.
1 柏油碎石地面
2 停机坪
4 飞机跑道
5 给铺柏油
6 柏油碎石路面