tarp
See also: TARP
English edit
Etymology edit
Pronunciation edit
- (UK) IPA(key): /tɑːp/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
- (US) enPR: tärp, IPA(key): /tɑɹp/
- Rhymes: -ɑː(ɹ)p
Noun edit
tarp (plural tarps)
- A tarpaulin.
- 1934 June 26, George Herriman, Krazy Kat, comic strip, →ISBN, page 172:
- [Ignatz, under the rain:] It's a good thing I had this tarp handy. [...] / [Officer Pupp:] Gimme that canvas, it's much more important that I keep dry.
- 1986, Paul Chadwick, Concrete: Under the Desert Stars, Dark Horse Books:
- {Gun pointing at head} Sorry, Quigley, but you had your chance to cooperate. / Bob, straighten the tarp, we don’t want the rug splattered.
Usage notes edit
- The short form might be perceived as informal, but in North American English, it has replaced tarpaulin in most situations.
Translations edit
tarpaulin — see tarpaulin
Verb edit
tarp (third-person singular simple present tarps, present participle tarping, simple past and past participle tarped)
- To cover something with a tarpaulin.
- 2001, Verne Huser, River Running: Canoeing, Kayaking, Rowing, Rafting, page 136:
- The load may be tarped for serious white water, but tarped or not, everything should be tied securely in case of capsize.
Translations edit
to cover something with a tarpaulin
Anagrams edit
Lithuanian edit
Etymology edit
From tárpas, compare dialectal tar̃pu.
Pronunciation edit
Preposition edit
tar̃p (with genitive)
- between (located in the middle of, connecting, dividing, or shared by two objects)
- among, amid (surrounded or encompassed by)
- Kaĩp vaĩkui ràsti viẽtą tar̃p bendraam̃žių? - How can a child find a place amongst his peers?