A man who serves as a sailor.
Sinónimos
Examples for "tar"
Examples for "tar"
1Read: Incomplete tar road built in rural Eastern Cape cost R117 million
2Many European oil companies have major interests in the Canadian tar sands.
3The tar moves slowly but seven thousand years is a long time.'
4Canadian officials have called development of the tar sands a national priority.
5In the tar furnace, the tar itself burns, and the tar only.
1Bokes the seaman and Sopsy the cook were in the same condition.
2But I'm pretty sure he's a seaman or used to be one.
3Of our bargaining with a Moorish seaman; and of an English slave.
4The seaman stationed at the stopper obeyed, and down went the anchor.
5It was a simple trap, but as Darrin paused, the seaman replied:
1He laughed gently, and answered in the words of the ancient mariner:-
2There was then in the settlement a veteran mariner named William Kidd.
3St. Elmo consoled the mariner for the loss of Castor and Pollux.
4He was a mariner, and the two namesakes were in partnership together.
5Start with Jacques Cartier, ancient mariner of Dieppe, in the year 1535.
1As it happens, we're still looking at Jagger's gob 50 years on.
2You were looking at at a pretty gob stopping endurance event, right?
3He sprang from concealment, almost embracing the young gob in his delight.
4It showed the utter unselfishness of the American doughboy, gob, and leatherneck.
5There it was, simple and painful as a smack in the gob.
1As I approached the stranger, I saw that he was a seafarer.
2Frederick arose and let the great, rosy-white seafarer clamber on his hand.
3Which rakish seafarer was played by Johnny Depp in the Pirates films?
4Verily, it convulseth and openeth the heart of the lone seafarer.
5He was not dying like a seafarer who had fairly earned his reputation.
1Born as he was in the nineteenth century, he was only a Jack-tar and a hero!
2No one appeared to mind him, till a jolly Jack-tar with both arms cut off, but dressed in full sailor's togs, lurched heavily towards him.
3Because of the smoke, and the carefully rationed water aboard ship, they looked more like a mob of filthy buccaneers than jack-tars.
4"The jack-tars would be delighted to go down in ships and do business in such an element."
5"It ought not to have been loose, and there is a bit of discipline for some jack-tar."
1IHS Technology analyst Jack Kent said the flat revenue indicated new challenges.
2The situation inside the camp was better than Jack had dared hope.
3We said similar things at Jack's dinner and Jack had no problem.
4His new book is called Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built.
5She'd seen one years ago, and Jack had made her stop going.
1He was a dry old salt, and listened more than he talked.
2And yet she did not look happy after the old salt's observation.
3Been so since you were a small lad, an early old salt.
4He rang the bells correctly, and handled the wheel like an old salt.
5He explained his plan to the old salt, and then asked his opinion.
1He was a burly fellow, with a look of the sea dog about him.
2And with that the old sea dog set sail back to the distant shore.
3My God! The old sea dog bounded from his chair.
4Trust an old sea dog to use his ears and keep himself out of notice.
5St. Arles lifted his mug to the sea dog.
6The old sea dog was some time recovering.
7The English captain, a grizzled old sea dog, listened to Levi's yarns with not a little contempt.
8You're an old sea dog, then?'
9Hurrah for the old sea dog!
10Now I troubled no more about the matter, being nothing but a sea dog who could use a weapon.
11At the stage entrance the old doorman with his look of sea dog recognized her, admitting her with a nod.
12Hell, I figured it was as good a time as any to throw a line to a fellow sea dog.
13A successful businessman - one of the brightest politicians produced in Cork - Hugh Coveney is an old sea dog.
14He struck me then as an amiable sea dog, combining much political and worldly wisdom with his knowledge of the sea.
15It may also be because the old sea dog can boast that his fish fingers are helping the seas to recover.
16I remember him: a tall, fine old sea dog whom I saw at times in Market Drayton when I was a child.