释义 |
Definition of tarpaper in English: tarpapernoun mass nounNorth American Paper impregnated with tar, used as a building material. Example sentencesExamples - It is a tarpaper roof, applied by professionals over a flat wood surface.
- You're going to have $400,000, million-dollar-mortgage, plastic-covered tarpaper shacks - which is what I think they're going for now - where the people in them, no longer have the jobs.
- At the time, their high school consisted of a series of leaky tarpaper shacks.
- When installing drain tile, they observe that if stone is placed around the tile, a barrier of straw, tarpaper or geotextile is placed between it and the sand to prevent stone contaminating sand.
- Within 30 minutes the mural had been covered by tarpaper and a wooden screen.
- Many agricultural workers continue to live the equivalent of an old-South sharecropper existence in tarpaper shacks, plywood shanties and wooden boxcars with no running water.
- My people lived in tarpaper shacks with plywood siding and five-gallon drums for heat.
- Damage to the houses was repaired with the least expensive materials: tarpaper covered holes in walls and roofs and water-resistant metallic paint filled in thin roof areas.
- They bought into plastic-coated, tarpaper shacks, with mortgage values assessed at between $500,000 and $1 million, or something of that sort.
- He exhibits lithographs and paintings on tarpaper.
- Except there's no sheetrock, only the black tarpaper they use to cover insulation and the beams and studs of the frame.
- On the way we pass through Chinle again, past the Navajo single wides, sometimes repaired with bits of plywood, dirt yards, a junker or two out front, quite often a Hogan, made either of logs or plywood and tarpaper out front too.
- The runways were lengthened and tarpaper shacks and other buildings were built in a matter of a few months.
- The woman lived with her children in a 12-foot-square tarpaper shack.
- Some 10,000 Lakota Sioux resided there during the 1970s, many living in tarpaper shacks without electricity or running water.
- When I first came here, my Mom pictured me living in a tarpaper shack.
- Largely illiterate and dependent on seasonal farm work, most families have struggled to pay the $25 to $50 rent for the tarpaper shacks that they've been living in up until now.
- As a lad, I wandered onto a patch of land with a tarpaper shack occupied by, as I learned later, a hermit.
- You're going to see all those people living in tarpaper shacks that cost $400,000 to $600,000 or more in mortgages out there in the hills around here, around Washington.
- Inside the garage he inhaled the scent of motor oil and dust and tarpaper.
Derivatives adjective North American The cabin was a tarpapered, uninsulated shack with a small wood stove. Example sentencesExamples - The shelters are small-pole barns constructed of local spruce (as are the ‘picnic benches’) with tarpapered roofs.
- Whoever built this put a lot of care into it - the roof was tarpapered and waterproof, and the remains of a moat surrounded the castle.
- This one has tarpapered walls and a corrugated asbestos roof added, but you can just make out the joists sitting on the top beam and part of the roof structure.
- Her house was a small tarpapered structure that had neither electricity nor plumbing.
Definition of tarpaper in US English: tarpapernounˈtärˌpāpər North American A heavy paper impregnated with tar and used as a waterproofing material in building. Example sentencesExamples - The woman lived with her children in a 12-foot-square tarpaper shack.
- Some 10,000 Lakota Sioux resided there during the 1970s, many living in tarpaper shacks without electricity or running water.
- On the way we pass through Chinle again, past the Navajo single wides, sometimes repaired with bits of plywood, dirt yards, a junker or two out front, quite often a Hogan, made either of logs or plywood and tarpaper out front too.
- Damage to the houses was repaired with the least expensive materials: tarpaper covered holes in walls and roofs and water-resistant metallic paint filled in thin roof areas.
- They bought into plastic-coated, tarpaper shacks, with mortgage values assessed at between $500,000 and $1 million, or something of that sort.
- Largely illiterate and dependent on seasonal farm work, most families have struggled to pay the $25 to $50 rent for the tarpaper shacks that they've been living in up until now.
- When installing drain tile, they observe that if stone is placed around the tile, a barrier of straw, tarpaper or geotextile is placed between it and the sand to prevent stone contaminating sand.
- The runways were lengthened and tarpaper shacks and other buildings were built in a matter of a few months.
- Except there's no sheetrock, only the black tarpaper they use to cover insulation and the beams and studs of the frame.
- Within 30 minutes the mural had been covered by tarpaper and a wooden screen.
- Inside the garage he inhaled the scent of motor oil and dust and tarpaper.
- You're going to see all those people living in tarpaper shacks that cost $400,000 to $600,000 or more in mortgages out there in the hills around here, around Washington.
- As a lad, I wandered onto a patch of land with a tarpaper shack occupied by, as I learned later, a hermit.
- My people lived in tarpaper shacks with plywood siding and five-gallon drums for heat.
- He exhibits lithographs and paintings on tarpaper.
- It is a tarpaper roof, applied by professionals over a flat wood surface.
- At the time, their high school consisted of a series of leaky tarpaper shacks.
- When I first came here, my Mom pictured me living in a tarpaper shack.
- You're going to have $400,000, million-dollar-mortgage, plastic-covered tarpaper shacks - which is what I think they're going for now - where the people in them, no longer have the jobs.
- Many agricultural workers continue to live the equivalent of an old-South sharecropper existence in tarpaper shacks, plywood shanties and wooden boxcars with no running water.
|