• Jacktar

    Alternative forms

    Origin

    From Jack, a common name for a sailor plus tar, used to waterproof sails as well as the seams between planks on wooden ships (1781). Sailors also used tar for clothing, grooming: their coats and hats, were made of the waterproof fabric called tarpaulin; seamen commonly pleated their long hair into a pigtail and smeared it with high grade tar to prevent it getting caught in the ship's equipment, a practice that continued until the early 20th century. Often a sailor's hands would be stained with tar.

    Full definition of jacktar

    Noun

    jacktar

    (plural jacktars)
    1. (British) Nickname for a sailor in the Royal Navy.
    © Wiktionary