English
Etymology
From tar + pall (“heavy canvas”) + -ing.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /tɑˈpɔː.lɪn/
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈtɑːɹpəlɪn/, /tɑɹˈpɔ.lɪn/
- Rhymes: -ɔːlɪn
Noun
tarpaulin (countable and uncountable, plural tarpaulins)
- (countable) A tarp, a heavy, waterproof sheet of material, often cloth, used as a cover or blanket.
Throw a tarpaulin over that woodpile before it gets wet.
- (countable, slang, archaic) A sailor.
- Synonym: tar
- (uncountable, obsolete) Any heavy, waterproof material used as a cover.
- (uncountable, nautical, obsolete) Canvas waterproofed with tar, used as a cover.
- A hat made of, or covered with, painted or tarred cloth, worn by sailors and others.
Translations
heavy, waterproof sheet of material
- Armenian: բրեզենտ (hy) (brezent)
- Azerbaijani: brezent
- Belarusian: брызе́нт m (bryzjént), брэзэ́нт m (brezént), брызэ́нт m (bryzént)
- Bulgarian: мушама́ f (mušamá), брезе́нт (bg) m (brezént)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 油布 (zh) (yóubù), 防水布 (zh) (fángshuǐbù), 苫布 (zh) (shànbù)
- Czech: plachtovina f, celtovina (cs) f, nepromokavá (vodoodpudivá, vodoodpuzující) látka (tkanina)
- Danish: presenning c
- Dutch: zeildoek (nl) n, (Flemish, dialectal) bâche f, dekzeil (nl) n
- Esperanto: baŝo
- Estonian: present (et)
- Finnish: suojapeite, pressu (fi)
- French: bâche (fr) f
- Georgian: ბრეზენტი (brezenṭi)
- German: Persenning (de) f, Plane (de) f, Abdeckplane (de) f
- Greek: μουσαμάς (el) m (mousamás)
- Hausa: tàmfôl m
- Hebrew: בְּרֶזֶנְט (he) m (brezént)
- Hindi: तिरपाल (hi) m (tirpāl)
- Hungarian: ponyva (hu)
- Icelandic: yfirbreiðsla f
- Indonesian: terpal (id)
- Italian: telone impermeabile m, tela cerata f
- Japanese: タープ (ja) (tāpu), ターポリン (tāporin)
- Kazakh: брезент (brezent)
- Korean: 타프 (ko) (tapeu), 방수포(防水布) (ko) (bangsupo)
- Kyrgyz: брезент (ky) (brezent)
- Latvian: brezents m
- Lithuanian: brezentas m
- Macedonian: мушама f (mušama), церада f (cerada)
- Maori: tāpōrena
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: брезент (mn) (brezent)
- Navajo: níbaal
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: presenning m
- Persian: بِرِزِنْت (fa) (berezent)
- Polish: brezent (pl) m
- Portuguese: encerado m, oleado (pt) m, lona (pt) f
- Romanian: prelată (ro) f
- Russian: брезе́нт (ru) m (brezént)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: цера́да f
- Roman: ceráda (sh) f
- Slovak: celtovina f
- Slovene: ponjava f, cerada f
- Spanish: lona alquitranada f, lona impermeable f, lona (es) f, toldo (es) m
- Swedish: presenning (sv) c
- Tagalog: tarapal
- Tajik: брезент (brezent)
- Thai: ผ้าใบกันน้ำ
- Turkish: muşamba (tr), branda (tr), tente (tr)
- Turkmen: brezent (tk)
- Ukrainian: брезе́нт (uk) m (brezént)
- Urdu: تِرپال m (tirpāl)
- Uyghur: برېزېنت (brëzënt)
- Uzbek: brezent (uz)
- Vietnamese: bạt (vi)
|
any heavy, waterproof material used as a cover
canvas waterproofed with tar, used as a cover
- Bulgarian: мушама́ f (mušamá)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: please add this translation if you can
- Esperanto: gudrotuko
- Finnish: tervakangas
- French: bâche (fr) f, prélart (fr) m
- Hebrew: אַבַּרְזִין (he) m (abarzín)
- Italian: incerata (it) f, tela incatramata f
- Spanish: please add this translation if you can
- Swedish: presenning (sv) c
|
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
Verb
tarpaulin (third-person singular simple present tarpaulins, present participle tarpaulining, simple past and past participle tarpaulined)
- To cover with a tarpaulin.
1929, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, When the World Screamed[1]:"Cover it up! Don't touch it!" said the Professor. So we tarpaulined it according to his instructions, and there it lies.
Usage notes
- In the US, tarp has been more common than tarpaulin in print since about 1990.[1] In speech since at least 1970.
Derived terms
Translations
to cover with a tarpaulin
— see tarp
See also
References
Further reading
Anagrams