ci-tar-pe
101tar baby — tar′ ba by n. cvb an inextricable problem or situation • Etymology: after the tar doll in an Uncle Remus story (1881) of J. C. Harris …
102tar pit — tar′ pit n. gel a seepage of natural tar or asphalt, esp. an accumulation that has animal bones preserved within it • Etymology: 1830–40 …
103tår — sb., en; en tår vand …
104tar with the same brush — ► tar with the same brush consider to have the same faults. Main Entry: ↑tar …
105tar baby — ☆ tar baby n. [after a small, sticky tar figure in a story by Joel Chandler Harris] something that is a persistent encumbrance …
106tar paper — ☆ tar paper n. a heavy paper impregnated with tar, used as a base for roofing, etc …
107tar seal — noun (NZ) 1. A tarmacadam surface on a road 2. A road so surfaced • • • Main Entry: ↑tar …
108tar-seal — tarˈ seal transitive verb To seal the surface of (a road) by covering with tarmacadam • • • Main Entry: ↑tar …
109tar-wa|ter — «TAHR WT uhr, WOT », noun. an infusion of tar in cold water, formerly administered as a medicine …
110tar|a|did|dle — «TAR uh DIHD uhl», noun. Especially British Informal. 1. a trifling falsehood; petty lie; fib: »Everybody told us it would be very cold, and as usual, everybody told taradiddles (Thomas H. Huxley). 2. something of little importance or consequence …