Tarmac vs Hangar - What's the difference?
tarmac | hangar |
The bituminous surface of a road.
* '>citation
(lb) The area of an airport where planes park or maneuver.
(British, Canada) To pave.
* {{quote-book, 2008, Valerie Belsey, Exploring Green Lanes in North and North-West Devon
, passage=To your left is a green lane, partly tarmacked with chippings, which leads up to a little car-parking area. }}
* 2014 ,
(aviation) To spend time idling on a runway, usually waiting for takeoff clearance.
* {{quote-book, 1989, Donald F. Wood & James C. Johnson, Contemporary Transportation
, passage="It is not unusual these days for the time spent tarmacking to exceed the time spent in the air, " said Senator John Danforth, R-Mo.}}
A large garage-like structure where aircraft are kept.
* 1919, , Duckworth, hardback edition, page 9
As nouns the difference between tarmac and hangar
is that tarmac is the bituminous surface of a road while hangar is a large garage-like structure where aircraft are kept.As a verb tarmac
is to pave.tarmac
English
(wikipedia tarmac)Noun
(en noun)Usage notes
* The tarmac is any area of an airfield that is paved. It is often used to describe planes that are still sitting on a paved surface due to some sort of delay.See also
* asphaltVerb
citation
Taking the rough with the smooth: Bolton residents anger over half-tarmaced road, ITV Granada:
- Residents in Bolton are angry after workmen tarmaced only one half of their road leaving the other half strewn with potholes.
citation
Alternative forms
* tarmackAnagrams
* ----hangar
English
Noun
(en noun)- The plane taxied on over to the hangar for repairs.
- By the side of it ran an open hangar upheld by a score of rough tarred posts.