“Roads were covered in tar, and after World War I, faster cars began to use them.”
“Products range from Staffordshire and Sunderland pottery to ballads, songs, and innumerable cartoons of which the British tar is represented in the image of a national hero.”
tar
(computing) A program for archiving files, common on Unix.
“Roads were covered in tar, and after World War I, faster cars began to use them.”
“Products range from Staffordshire and Sunderland pottery to ballads, songs, and innumerable cartoons of which the British tar is represented in the image of a national hero.”
tar
A Persian long-necked, waisted instrument, shared by many cultures and countries in the Middle East and the Caucasus.
“Roads were covered in tar, and after World War I, faster cars began to use them.”
“Products range from Staffordshire and Sunderland pottery to ballads, songs, and innumerable cartoons of which the British tar is represented in the image of a national hero.”
tar
A single-headed round frame drum originating in North Africa and the Middle East.
“Roads were covered in tar, and after World War I, faster cars began to use them.”
“Products range from Staffordshire and Sunderland pottery to ballads, songs, and innumerable cartoons of which the British tar is represented in the image of a national hero.”