Definition, Betydelse, Synonymer & Anagram | Engelska ordet TAR


TAR

Definition av TAR

  1. tjära
  2. tar, persiskt musikinstrument
  3. tjära; smörja in eller täcka med tjära

4

5
ART
ATR
RAT
RTA
TRA

Antal bokstäver

3

Är palindrom

Nej

2
AR
TA

840

235


12
AR
ART
AT
ATR
RA
RAT
RT
RTA


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Exempel på hur du använder TAR i en mening

  • Coal tar is a thick dark liquid which is a by-product of the production of coke and coal gas from coal.
  • "Gibberish" is also used as an imprecation to denigrate or tar ideas or opinions the user disagrees with or finds irksome, a rough equivalent of "nonsense", "folderol", "balderdash", or "claptrap".
  • Meconium, unlike later feces, is viscous and sticky like tar – its color usually being a very dark olive green and it is almost odorless.
  • Phenol was first extracted from coal tar, but today is produced on a large scale (about 7 million tonnes a year) from petroleum-derived feedstocks.
  • Only the western third of the county has coal; the rest lies in the Clifty Area, which has similar sandstone bedrock, some of it is bituminous but never commercially exploited as tar sands or rock asphalt.
  • Nicolas Etienne Marafret Layssard arrived in December 1766, with the permission of Aubrey and Foucault, to establish a "tar works" in the pineries of Rapides, for naval stores.
  • In the 16th century, many Polish exports, including grain, wood, ash, tar and hemp, were floated from western Poland via Frankfurt to the port of Szczecin, with the high Brandenburgian customs duties on Polish goods lowered in the early 17th century.
  • In the early 1820s, two separate reports described a white solid with a pungent odor derived from the distillation of coal tar.
  • Low-growing, it consists of beach spinifex, stalky grass, goatsfoot, bulls-head vine, sea purslane and tar vine.
  • Here they collected pitch (brea in Spanish) from tar pits which they used to waterproof their belongings and to say Mass.
  • On January 19, 1911, the town's map was filed under the new name of Brea, from the Spanish language word for natural asphalt, also called bitumen, pitch or tar.
  • He was brought to the square and compelled to kiss the flag and praise president Woodrow Wilson, but was spared tar and feathers.
  • These kilns served the timber industry; they produced naval stores such as tar, which were shipped by schooner to New Orleans and used for caulking ships.
  • The buildings in Havre during the 1890s were typical first-generation structures and mainly consisted of tar papered wood-framed shacks.
  • Sheep, cattle, and hogs were also raised in large numbers and farmers often supplemented their income with shingle making, woodcrafts, and the production of tar and turpentine from the area's abundant forests.


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